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Business
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Business Mathematics
Quiz 13: Annuities: Special Situations
Path 4
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Question 1
Essay
A perpetuity and an annuity both have the same values for PMT and i. Which has the larger present value? Give a brief explanation.
Question 2
Essay
If market interest rates rise, will it require a larger endowment to sustain a perpetuity with a particular payment size? Give a brief explanation.
Question 3
Essay
Will the market value of a perpetual preferred share (paying a fixed periodic dividend) rise or fall if the rate of return (dividend yield) required by investors declines? Give a brief explanation.
Question 4
Short Answer
A perpetuity is to pay $10,000 at the end of every six months. How much less money is required to fund the perpetuity if the money can be invested to earn 5% compounded semiannually instead of 4% compounded semiannually?
Question 5
Short Answer
In 1752, the British government converted all of its outstanding bonds to perpetual bonds that paid a fixed interest rate. These bonds paid only the interest every three months-the principal amount of the debt would never be repaid. The perpetual bonds have come to be known as "Consols," and they trade in the British financial markets. The owner of a ≤1000 face-value (or denomination) Consol receives ≤6.25 every three months. a) What is the fixed interest rate (on the face value) paid by the Consols? b) If the prevailing long-term interest rate in the British financial markets is 4.5% compounded quarterly, what is the fair market value of a ≤1000 face-value Consol? (Assume that you will receive the first interest payment in three months.)
Question 6
Short Answer
An old agreement requires a town to pay $500 per year in perpetuity to the owner of a parcel of land for a water well dug on the property in the 1920s. The well is no longer used, and the town wants to buy out the contract, which has become an administrative nuisance. What amount (including the regular scheduled payment) should the landowner be willing to accept on the date of the next scheduled payment if long-term low-risk investments now earn 5.8% compounded annually?
Question 7
Short Answer
A company's perpetual preferred shares pay a semiannual dividend of $3.00. The next dividend will be paid tomorrow. a) At what price would the shares provide an investor with a 4.5% semiannually compounded rate of return? The investor will receive tomorrow's dividend. b) If the shares are trading at $70, what nominal rate of return will they provide to a purchaser?
Question 8
Short Answer
In this section, does constant growth mean that each successive payment increases by the same dollar amount? If not, what does it mean?
Question 9
Short Answer
Randall wants to accumulate $750,000 in his RRSP by the end of his 30-year working career. What should be his initial year-end contribution if he intends to increase the contribution by 3% every year and the RRSP earns 10% compounded annually?
Question 10
Short Answer
How much will it cost to purchase a 20-year indexed annuity in which the end-of-quarter payments start at $5000 and grow by 0.5% every quarter? Assume that the money used to purchase the annuity earns 6% compounded quarterly.