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Present Values 3
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Lecture1.1
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Lecture1.2
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Lecture1.3
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NPV vs. IRR 4
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Lecture2.1
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Lecture2.2
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Lecture2.3
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Lecture2.4
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Other Profit Measures 4
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Lecture3.1
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Lecture3.2
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Lecture3.3
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Lecture3.4
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Depreciation 4
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Lecture4.1
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Lecture4.2
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Lecture4.3
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Lecture4.4
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Cash Flow Challenges 9
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Lecture5.1
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Lecture5.2
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Lecture5.3
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Lecture5.4
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Lecture5.5
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Lecture5.6
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Lecture5.7
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Lecture5.8
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Lecture5.9
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Capital Asset Pricing Model 3
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Lecture6.1
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Lecture6.2
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Lecture6.3
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Risky Debt 3
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Lecture7.1
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Lecture7.2
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Lecture7.3
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Unlevering Equity 3
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Lecture8.1
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Lecture8.2
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Lecture8.3
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Weighted Average Cost of Capital 4
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Lecture9.1
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Lecture9.2
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Lecture9.3
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Lecture9.4
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Debt Effect Analysis 2
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Lecture10.1
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Lecture10.2
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WACC Challenge 2
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Lecture11.1
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Lecture11.2
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Relative Valuation 4
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Lecture12.1
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Lecture12.2
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Lecture12.3
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Lecture12.4
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Forward Contract Valuation 3
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Lecture13.1
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Lecture13.2
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Lecture13.3
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Introduction
We learned present value in basic finance, but we are going to modify the way we program it now to make it easier to work with. Our idea will be to create a class representing each cash flow that has the time period of the cash flow, the rate we are discounting for, and the nominal value of the cash flow. We then want to implement a function that takes a time period and discounts/values the cash flow to that time period. We then will be able to use this to get the present value (time 0) or the discounted or future value at time t.
Challenge 1
Try creating this, remember that the way you move a cash flow forward is to multiply it by (1+r), and the way you move it back a time period is divide by (1+r).
Challenge 2
If you get 1000 dollars at time 1 and time 2, with a discount rate of 5%, what is the present value? What is the future value at time 3?
Next
Solutions