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Real Cash Flows Paul Adams owns a health club in downtown Los Angeles. He charges his customers an annual fee of $400 and has an existing customer base of 700. Paul plans to raise the annual fee by 6 percent every year and expects the club membership to grow at a constant rate of 3 percent for the next five years. The overall expenses of running the health club are $125,000 a year and are expected to grow at the inflation rate of 2 percent annually. After live years, Paul plans to buy a luxury boat for $500,000, close the health club, and travel the world in his boat for the rest of his life. What is the annual amount that Paul can spend while on his world tour if he will have no money left in the bank when he dies? Assume Paul has a remaining life of 25 years after he retires and cams 9 percent on his savings.
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Chapter 8 Solutions
EBK CORPORATE FINANCE
- A business man must fund an account for him to pay the maintenance of the building after it shut down in 10 years. The costs until the business shutdown is part of the operating cost of the business while the maintenance costs starts in 10 years at 23,000 annually. Draw the cash flow diagram and solve on how much money should be deposited if the fund earns an interest of 12 percent?arrow_forwardSean needs $18,000 immediately as a down payment on a new home. He can borrow this money from his company credit union. He will be required to repay the loan in equal payments made every six months, starting two years from now, over the next 5 years. The annual interest rate is 10%. Draw a cash flow diagram in the point of view of Sean. How many equal payments should be made? USING MANUAL COMPUTATION NO EXCELarrow_forwardSolve and Draw the Cash Flow Diagram Lourdes has just retired and plans to consume $11093 from the retirement account every year for the next 11 years starting one year from today, meeting the rest of the expenses from other resources. If the annual interest rate is 9.6% compounded semiannually, how much does Lourdes have in the retirement account today?arrow_forward
- A civil engineer who is about to retire has accumulated 750 000 in a savings account that pays 6%per year, compounded annually. Suppose that the engineer wishes to withdraw a fixed sum of moneyat the end of each year for 15 years. What is the maximum amount that he can withdraw? Note: Also draw its cashflow diagramarrow_forwardYou decide to invest money for buying a house. You initially invest $30,000 and plan on making annual payments of $3,000 for 15 years. You want to rent the house for $2,000 starting on year 4 for 8 years. You estimate that you will spend $1,500 for repairs at year 6 and $2,000 at year 12. Draw the cash flow diagramarrow_forwardengineering economics John bought a car worth $ 100,000 if paid in cash. If paid on installment basis, he will pay $ 20,000 downpayment, $ 30,000 at the end of one year; $40,000 at the end of three years and a final payment at the end of five years. Interest rate is 20% compounded annually. a) Construct the cash flow diagram if paid on installment basis: b) What will be the amount of the final payment?arrow_forward
- Daryl Kearns saved $240,000 during the 30 years that he worked for a major corporation. Now he has retired at the age of 60 and has begun to draw a comfortable pension check every month. He wants to ensure the financial security of his retirement by investing his savings wisely and is currently considering two investment opportunities. Both investments require an initial payment of $160,000. The following table presents the estimated cash inflows for the two alternatives: Year 4 $80,000 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Opportunity #1 Opportunity #2 $44,000 81,600 $47,200 $63,200 86,400 16,000 16,000 Mr. Kearns decides to use his past average return on mutual fund investments as the discount rate; it is 8 percent. (PV of $1 and PVA of $1) (Use appropriate factor(s) from the tables provided.) Required a. Compute the net present value of each opportunity. Which should Mr. Kearns adopt based on the net present value approach? b. Compute the payback period for each opportunity. Which should Mr. Kearns…arrow_forwardAlbert has told you that one of his goals is to start his own business within three years. He has estimated that he will need $7,000 in five years to get his business off the ground. Based upon your research of historical, moderate investment returns you determine that Albert should reasonably be able to obtain a return of 5.5% per year over this timeframe. 1. How much does Albert need to deposit today in order to achieve this goal? Interest compounds annually on this investment. 2. Based upon Albert's liquidity, does he have enough currently saved to achieve this goal? Based upon your analysis, Albert wonders if it might be better to put money away each month towards this goal instead of making such a lump sum payment. Using the same information:arrow_forwardThe Miller family wants to have $60,000 for future renovations for their home. They currently have $21,000 in cash. How long in years will it take the $21,0000 cash to grow to $60,000 if their savings 5% per annum, compounded quarterly?arrow_forward
- Draw the cash flow diagram for each problem and use interest rate with five decimal places. A person needs $20,000 immediately as a down payment on a new home. Suppose that she can borrow this money from her company credit union. She will be required to repay the loan in equal payments made every six months over the next 10 years. The annual interest rate being charged is 10% compounded bimonthly. What is the amount of each payment?arrow_forwardPayments of Ordinary Annuities Ryan wants to get together $40 000 to purchase the first house in his housing empire. He does the math, and he begins making regular quarterly deposits into a savings account that earns 8.5%, compounded quarterly, for 5 years. What must his regular deposits be in order to achieve his goal of saving $40 000 in 5 years?arrow_forward2. You invest $12,000 a year in to a retirement fund starting at age 25 and continue to do so until the age of 55. You also plan to increase the investment by $1000 each year starting when you are 37 ($13,000), 38 ($14,000) through age 55. You plan to retire at age 65 with $1,000,000 in your retirement account. a. Created the needed cash flow diagram b. What average annual interest rate (nearest 2%) must your retirement account produce? Do you think this interest rate is reasonable for your retirement planning? c. Is it reasonable to increase your contribution $1,000 a year starting at age 37 through age 55? What would your contribution be per year at age 55? d. What would happen if you retired at 60 instead of 65? Solve the problem using an Excell spreadsheet.arrow_forward
- Essentials Of InvestmentsFinanceISBN:9781260013924Author:Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
- Foundations Of FinanceFinanceISBN:9780134897264Author:KEOWN, Arthur J., Martin, John D., PETTY, J. WilliamPublisher:Pearson,Fundamentals of Financial Management (MindTap Cou...FinanceISBN:9781337395250Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. HoustonPublisher:Cengage LearningCorporate Finance (The Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series i...FinanceISBN:9780077861759Author:Stephen A. Ross Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics Professor, Randolph W Westerfield Robert R. Dockson Deans Chair in Bus. Admin., Jeffrey Jaffe, Bradford D Jordan ProfessorPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
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