Principles of Engineering Economic Analysis, 6th Edition solutions
manual by John A. White, Kenneth E. Case, David B. Pratt
NOTES - CHAPTER 2 SOLUTIONS
FOLLOWING
ARE SOME THOUGHTS ABOUT THE PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS IN THIS CHAPTER THAT MAY
BE OF HELP TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS.
1
THIS IS, PERHAPS, THE
MOST CRITICAL CHAPTER IN THE BOOK IN THAT IT DEALS WITH THE "TIME VALUE
OF MONEY (TVM)," A FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPT USED THROUGHOUT THE REST OF THE
BOOK.
2
THERE ARE 180 BASE
PROBLEMS, MANY WITH MULTIPLE PARTS, AND MULTIPLE SOLUTIONS FOR MANY OF THOSE
PARTS ARE PRESENTED IN THIS SOLUTION MANUAL
3
THERE ARE FIVE
DIFFERENT METHODS THAT ARE SEEN MULTIPLE TIMES IN THESE SOLUTIONS. THEY INCLUDE USE OF (1) SIMPLE AND COMPOUND
INTEREST FORMULAS, (2) INTEREST TABLES SUCH AS THOSE IN APPENDICES A AND B,
AS WELL AS "ELECTRONIC" INTEREST TABLES (SEE ITEM 5 BELOW), (3) USE
OF MYRIAD EXCEL FUNCTIONS, (4) SEARCH PROCEDURES USING EXCEL'S
"SOLVER" AND "GOAL SEEK" TOOLS, AND (5) BRUTE FORCE
TABULAR APPROACHES
4
THE COMPOUND INTEREST
FORMULAS ARE OFTEN THE MOST ONEROUS TO USE, GIVEN THAT THEY REPRESENT THE
FUNDAMENTAL MATHEMATICS OF TVOM.
5
THE INTEREST TABLES
REPRESENT THE MOST COMMON APPROACH USED HERETOFORE IN "ENGINEERING
ECONOMY" COURSES; THEY USUALLY VASTLY SIMPLIFY THE MATHEMATICS INVOLVED
BY INCORPORATING ONE OR MORE COMPOUND INTEREST FORMULAS INTO A SINGLE
TABULATED "FACTOR" AVAILABLE IN APPENDICES A AND B. SINCE THE INTEREST TABLES ARE FOR ONLY A
FINITE (ALTHOUGH VERY LARGE) SET OF INTEREST RATES (i AND j) AND TIME
HORIZONS (n), THEY MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE FOR A SPECIFIC SET OF i, j, OR n
NEEDED. "ELECTRONIC"
INTEREST TABLES ARE AVAILABLE, AND HAVE BEEN USED WHEN UNAVAILABLE TABULATED
VALUES OF i, j, AND/OR n HAVE BEEN NEEDED.
PLEASE SEE NOTES 13 AND 14 BELOW FOR MORE DETAIL ON THE USE OF
"ELECTRONIC" INTEREST TABLES.
6
PROBLEMS 25, 63, 92,
123, AND 146 ASK FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF CERTAIN INTEREST FACTORS SUCH AS ARE
PRESENTED IN THE INTEREST TABLES.
THESE SERVE TO CONVINCE THE STUDENT THAT THERE IS NO "MAGIC"
INVOLVED IN THE INTEREST TABLES. IN
ADDITION, THE FORMULAS USED IN DEVELOPING THE INTEREST FACTORS HAVE BEEN VERY
USEFUL TO THE AUTHORS IN "COPY AND PASTE" OPERATIONS IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHAPTER 2 SOLUTIONS.
7
THE EXCEL FUNCTIONS
HAVE NOT TRADITIONALLY BEEN WIDELY USED IN TEACHING "ENGINEERING
ECONOMY." THEY HAVE, HOWEVER,
BEEN USED IN THE WORLD OF FINANCE. THE
EXCEL FUNCTIONS ARE WELL DESIGNED, AND PROVIDE A VERY PRECISE TOOL FOR USE IN
SOLVING A WIDE ARRAY OF PROBLEMS INVOLVING TVM. BEWARE!
FOR THE NOVICE, THESE EXCEL FUNCTIONS MAY APPEAR CONFUSING, COMPLEX,
AND NOT WORTH THE TIME TO LEARN. THEY
ARE, HOWEVER, QUITE STRAIGHTFORWARD AND CONSISTENT, ONCE ONE GETS PAST THE
INITIAL TRIALS OF LEARNING SOMETHING NEW.
THEY ARE LIKELY TO BE YOUR FAVORITE METHOD OF PROBLEM SOLUTION IF YOU
USE THEM TO SOLVE OR CHECK YOUR SOLUTIONS IN THIS CHAPTER.
8
SOMETIMES, YOU WILL
NEED TO SOLVE FOR A MONETARY VALUE, AN INTEREST RATE, A TIME INTERVAL, A
GRADIENT, OR WHATEVER, NEEDED TO MATCH OTHER PARAMETERS OF A PROBLEM (E.G.,
WHAT INTEREST RATE MAKES AN INVESTMENT OF $100 WORTH $150 IN THREE YEARS). WHILE IT IS OFTEN POSSIBLE AND CONVENIENT
TO USE ANALYTICAL APPROACHES (E.G., ALGEBRA), SOMETIMES THESE SOLUTIONS ARE
DIFFICULT AND CUMBERSOME (ANALYTICALLY INTRACTABLE OR NEARLY SO). SEARCH PROCEDURES CAN BE VERY HANDY IN
THESE CASES. EXCEL PROVIDES
"SOLVER" AND "GOAL SEEK," BOTH OF WHICH RECEIVE SOME USE
IN THE SOLUTIONS FOR CHAPTER 2. THE
AUTHORS HAVE FOUND SOLVER TO BE QUITE ROBUST AND ACCURATE FOR THE PROBLEMS OF
CHAPTER 2. GOAL SEEK, ALTHOUGH CLOSE,
IS NOT QUITE AS CONSISTENT. BOTH ARE
EASY TO USE.
9
THE "BRUTE
FORCE" TABULAR APPROACH CAN BE VERY USEFUL WHEN A PROBLEM IS VERY
COMPLEX AND DIFFICULT TO KEEP IN MIND WHILE ATTEMPTING TO USE AN INTEREST
TABLE APPROACH OR AN EXCEL FUNCTION APPROACH.
IN THESE INSTANCES, IT IS OFTEN USEFUL TO SIMPLY LIST THE ENTIRE SET
OF CASH FLOWS, PERIOD BY PERIOD. THEN,
OFTEN AN NPV FUNCTION OR AN FV-PLUS-NPV FUNCTION OR A PMT-PLUS-NPV FUNCTION
CAN BE EASILY USED ON THE TABLE. THE
BRUTE FORCE TABULAR APPROACH ALSO HAS THE ADVANTAGE THAT THE ENTIRE PATTERN
OF CASH FLOWS CAN BE SEEN AND UNDERSTOOD.
BE CAREFUL! ACTUALLY, MOST
PROBLEMS CAN BE SOLVED USING THE BRUTE FORCE APPROACH - IN FACT, IT IS QUITE
COMMONLY USED IN INDUSTRY! FOR NOW,
WHILE LEARNING THIS MATERIAL, USE THE BRUTE FORCE APPROACH ONLY AS A LAST
RESORT OR AS A PROBLEM CHECK AS HAS BEEN DONE IN THESE SOLUTIONS. TO USE THE BRUTE FORCE APPROACH ALONE IN
CHAPTER 2 IS TO NOT LEARN THE OTHER APPROACHES.
10
IN THIS CHAPTER, WITH
MULTIPLE APPROACHES USED IN SOLVING MANY PROBLEMS, THERE ARE OFTEN SLIGHTLY
DIFFERENT SOLUTIONS ACHIEVED. THESE
ARE NOT WRONG! USUALLY, IF NOT ALWAYS,
THE INTEREST FORMULA APPROACH AND THE EXCEL FUNCTION APPROACH WILL BE
PRECISELY THE SAME BECAUSE THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO ROUND OFF ERROR WITHIN THE
COMPUTER. THE INTEREST TABLE APPROACH
WILL BE SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT, DUE TO THE PRESENTATION OF INTEREST FACTORS TO
FIVE PLACES AFTER THE DECIMAL IN MOST CASES.
MANY TABLES USE ONLY FOUR PLACES.
EVEN WITH FIVE PLACES, THERE WILL BE SOME MINOR DISCREPANCIES WHEN
COMPARED TO THE EVEN MORE PRECISE APPROACHES.
NOTE THAT SUCH DIFFERENCES ARE ALMOST ALWAYS INCONSEQUENTIAL BECAUSE
THE ESTIMATES REQUIRED IN ECONOMIC EVALUATIONS ARE USUALLY ONLY
APPROXIMATIONS ANYWAY.
11
EVEN THOUGH MANY
PROBLEMS HAVE MULTIPLE PARTS, IT IS NOT INTENDED THAT ALL PARTS OF A PROBLEM
NECESSARILY BE ASSIGNED AND WORKED. IN
MANY CASES, THE LEARNING THAT TAKES PLACE CAN BE ACHIEVED BY WORKING ONLY ONE
OR TWO PARTS. SEE, FOR EXAMPLE,
PROBLEM 79.
12
WHILE MULTIPLE
APPROACHES ARE OFTEN USED HEREIN TO SOLVE A PROBLEM, KEEP IN MIND THAT THERE
ARE AN INFINITE (LITERALLY) NUMBER OF WAYS A TVM PROBLEM CAN BE SET UP AND
SOLVED. TRANSLATION - THE SOLUTIONS
PRESENTED HEREIN ARE QUITE DIRECT IN THEIR APPROACH, BUT NOT THE ONLY
APPROACH.
13
WHEN A SOLUTION MAKES
USE OF BOTH INTEREST TABLES AND EXCEL FUNCTIONS, THE ANSWERS WILL OFTEN BE
SOMEWHAT DIFFERENT DUE TO ROUNDOFF ERROR IN THE BOOK TABLES. IN GENERAL, THE EXCEL FUNCTIONS CARRY MANY
PLACES WITHIN THE COMPUTER, THEREBY MAKING THEM "EXACT" (REMEMBER,
SINCE MOST THINGS IN ENGINEERING ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ARE ESTIMATED, IT IS
SOMEWHAT LUDICROUS TO REFER TO MANY SOLUTIONS AS "EXACT"). SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN THE PRECISION OF EXCEL
FUNCTIONS AND THE BOOK'S TABLES ARE "ELECTRONIC" INTEREST
TABLES. A SEPARATE WORKSHEET WITH
ELECTRONIC INTEREST TABLES IS AVAILABLE ON THE BOOK WEB SITE. USING THAT WORKSHEET, THE USER MAY SELECT
THE NUMBER OF PLACES FOLLOWING THE DECIMAL TO USE. HERE IS THE PROTOCOL FOLLOWED IN THE
SOLUTIONS TO CHAPTER 2:
a
IF THE VALUES OF i, j,
AND n NEEDED ARE AVAILABLE IN THE BOOK'S TABLES, THEY ARE USED HEREIN TO
EMULATE THE PROCEDURE USED BY SOMEONE USING THEM, THIS IS THE TRADITIONAL
APPROACH TO ENGINEERING ECONOMIC ANALYSIS.
NOTE THAT MOST FACTORS ARE PRESENTED TO 5 PLACES AFTER THE DECIMAL.
b
IF THE VALUES OF i, j,
AND n NEEDED ARE NOT AVAILABLE IN THE BOOK'S TABLES, THE ELECTRONIC TABLES
ARE USED. IN THIS CASE, THE NUMBER OF
PLACES AFTER THE DECIMAL MUST BE DECIDED UPON FOR BOTH THE INPUT VALUES OF i
AND/OR j AND ALSO FOR THE FACTOR VALUE ITSELF. HEREIN, 9 PLACES FOLLOWING THE DECIMAL ARE
USED IN ALL CASES. THE REASON FOR 9
PLACES IS THAT THIS NUMBER IS SIMILAR TO THE NUMBER OF PLACES AVAILABLE ON
MANY SCIENTIFIC AND FINANCIAL CALCULATORS.
c
AS A FIRST EXAMPLE,
LET'S DETERMINE THE MONTHLY PAYMENT THAT IS EQUIVALENT TO A PRESENT VALUE OF
$10,000 IF INTEREST IS 6% NOMINAL, COMPOUNDED MONTHLY OVER A PERIOD OF 24
MONTHS.
P=
$10,000.00
n=
24 MONTHS
r=
6%
NOMINAL COMPOUNDED MONTHLY
i=
0.500000000%
PER MONTH
INTEREST TABLE APPROACH:
A=
=$10,000*(A|P 6%/12,24)
=$10,000*(A|P 0.5%,24)
=10000*0.04432
$443.20
FE-type Sample Questions for PEEA 6e Chapter 1
Chapter
1
- The fact
that one should not add or subtract money unless it occurs at the same
point in time is an illustration of what concept?
(a)
time value of money
(b) marginal return
(c)
economy of scale
(d) Pareto principle
Answer: (a)
- If a set of
investment alternatives contains all possible choices that can be made,
then the set is said to be which of the following?
(a)
coherent
(b) collectively
exhaustive
(c)
independent
(d) mutually
exclusive
Answer: (b)
- Which of the
following examples does not illustrate a cash flow approach?
(a)
a payroll manager writes a check to pay a shop
worker
(b) a neighbor pays
$0.25 to buy a glass of lemonade at a lemonade stand
(c)
a hungry teenager pays for snacks with a debit card
(d) a building
contractor buys lumber on account at a local lumber yard
Answer: (d)
- The
“discounting” in a discounted cash flow approach requires the use of which
of the following?
(a)
an interest rate
(b) the economic
value added
(c)
the gross margin
(d) the incremental
cost
Answer: (a)
- Risks and returns are
generally ______________ correlated.
(a)
inversely
(b) negatively
(c)
not
(d) positively
Answer: (d)
- Assuming
zero incremental costs for the “do nothing” alternative is generally
(a)
appropriate
(b) risky
(c)
optimistic
(d) realistic
Answer: (b)
- Answering
“what if” questions with respect to an economic analysis is an example of
which step in the Systematic Economic Analysis Technique?
(a)
identifying the investment alternatives
(b) defining the planning
horizon
(c)
comparing the alternatives
(d) performing supplementary
analysis
Answer: (d)
- Which of the
following is useful in making a final selection when multiple criteria
exist?
(a)
four discounted cash flow rules
(b) seven step systematic
analysis technique
(c)
ten principles of engineering economic analysis
(d) weighted factor comparison
method
Answer: (d)
- Time value of money
calculations may not be required in an economic evaluation for all of the
following reasons except
(a)
annual cash flows are proportional to the first year
cash flow
(b) inflation is
absent
(c)
no investment of capital is required
(d) no differences in
the cash flows of the alternatives after the first year
Answer: (b)
- If a
student’s time value of money rate is 30 percent, then the student would
be indifferent between $100 today and how much in one year?
(a)
$30
(b) $100
(c)
$103
(d) $130
Answer: (d)
- A bottled
mango juice drink must contain at least 17.0% mango juice for proper
taste. The drink is created by
blending unprocessed juice from two orchards. RightRipe Orchard sells unprocessed
mango juice that is 12.5% mango juice and 87.5% base liquids. PureBlend Orchard sells unprocessed
juice that is 20.0% mango juice and 80.0% base. What percentage of unprocessed juice
from each orchard is required to exactly meet the 17.0% specification?
(a)
40% RightRipe; 60% PureBlend
(b) 50% RightRipe;
50% PureBlend
(c)
60% RightRipe; 50% PureBlend
(d) Can not be
determined from the information given
Answer: (a)
- A printed circuit board
is produced by passing through a sequence of three steps. The scrap rates for steps one through
three are 5%, 3%, and 3%, respectively.
If 10,000 good parts are needed, the number that should be started
at step one is closest to which of the following?
(a)
11,100
(b) 11,140
(c)
11,190
(d) 11,240
Answer: (c)
- Reconsider
the preceding problem assuming that the sequence can be rearranged such
that the processing step with the 5% scrap rate occurs last rather than
first. Using this redesigned
sequence, the number of parts that should be started will
(a)
Increase
(b) Decrease
(c)
Be unchanged
(d) Cannot be
determined from the information given
Answer: (c)
FE-type Sample Questions for PEEA 6e Chapter 2
Chapter
2
- A deposit of
$3,000 is made in a savings account that pays 7.5% interest compounded
annually. How much money will be
available to the depositor at the end of 16 years?
(a)
$8,877
(b) $10,258
(c)
$9,542
(d) $943
Answer:
(c)
- The plan was
to leave $5,000 on deposit in a savings account for 15 years at 6.5%
interest compounded annually. It
became necessary to withdraw $1,500 at the end of the 5th year. How much will be on deposit at the end
of the 15 year period?
(a)
$11,359
(b) $9,359
(c)
$12,043
(d) $10,043
Answer:
(d)
3.
A child receives $100,000 as a gift which is
deposited in a 6% bank account compounded semiannually. If $5,000 is withdrawn at the end of each
half year, how long will the money last?
(a)
21.0 years
(b) 15.5 years
(c)
25.0 years
(d) 18.0 years
Answer:
(b)
4.
Your company seeks to take over Good Deal Company. Your company’s offer for Good Deal is for $3,000,000
in cash upon signing the agreement followed by 10 annual payments of $300,000
starting one year later. The time value
of money is 10%. What is the present
worth your company’s offer?
(a)
$3,000,000
(b) $2,281,830
(c)
$4,843,380
(d) $5,281,830
Answer:
(c)
5.
If you want to triple your money at an interest rate
of 6% per year compounded annually, for how many years would you have to leave
the money in the account?
(a)
12 years
(b) 19 years
(c)
32 years
(d) cannot be
determined without knowing the amount invested.
Answer: (b)
6.
Let F be the accumulated sum, P the principal
invested, i the annual compound interest rate, and n the number of years. Which of the following correctly relates
these quantities?
(a)
F = P (1 + in)
(b) F = P (1 + i)n
(c)
F = P (1 + n)i
(d) F = P (1 + ni)n-1
Answer: (b)
7.
The maintenance costs of a car increase by $200 each
year. This cash flow pattern is best
described by which of the following?
(a)
gradient series
(b) geometric series
(c)
infinite series
(d) uniform series
Answer: (a)
8.
If you invest $5,000 three years from now, how much
will be in the account fifteen years from now if i = 10% compounded annually.
(a)
$8,053
(b) $15,692
(c)
$20,886
(d) $27,800
Answer: (b)
9.
The president of a growing engineering firm wishes
to give each of 20 employees a holiday bonus.
How much needs to be deposited each month for a year at a 12% nominal
rate, compounded monthly, so that each employee will receive a $2,500 bonus?
(a)
$2,070
(b) $3,840
(c)
$3,940
(d) $4,170
Answer: (c)
10. What is the
annual interest rate if a simple interest loan of $10,000 for four years
charges a total of $2,800 interest? The
loan is repaid with a single payment at the end of year four.
(a)
7.0%
(b) 28.0%
(c)
i such that 12,800 = 10,000 (F|P,i,4)
(d) cannot be
determined from the information given
Answer: (a)
11. What is the
effective annual interest rate if the nominal annual interest rate is 24% per
year compounded monthly?
(a)
2.00%
(b) 24.00%
(c)
26.82%
(d) 27.12%
Answer: (c)
12. Under what circumstances
are the effective annual interest rate and the period interest rate equal?
(a)
Never true
(b) If the number of
compounding periods per year is one
(c)
If the number of compounding periods per year is
infinite
(d) Always true
Answer: (b)
13. Consider the
following cash flow diagram. What is the
value of X if the present worth of the diagram is $400 and the interest rate is
15% compounded annually?
200
X
X
0
1
2
3
(a)
$246
(b) $165
(c)
$200
(d) $146
Answer: (b)
14. A young engineer
calculated that monthly payments of $A are required to pay off a $5,000 loan
for n years at i% interest, compounded annually. If the engineer decides to borrow $10,000
instead with the same n and i%, her monthly payments will be $2A.
(a)
TRUE
(b) FALSE
(c)
Can not be determined without knowing the value of n
and i
(d) Can not be
determined without knowing the value of n or i
Answer: (a)
FE-type Sample Questions for PEEA 6e Chapter 1
Chapter
1
- The fact
that one should not add or subtract money unless it occurs at the same
point in time is an illustration of what concept?
(a)
time value of money
(b) marginal return
(c)
economy of scale
(d) Pareto principle
Answer: (a)
- If a set of
investment alternatives contains all possible choices that can be made,
then the set is said to be which of the following?
(a)
coherent
(b) collectively
exhaustive
(c)
independent
(d) mutually
exclusive
Answer: (b)
- Which of the
following examples does not illustrate a cash flow approach?
(a)
a payroll manager writes a check to pay a shop
worker
(b) a neighbor pays
$0.25 to buy a glass of lemonade at a lemonade stand
(c)
a hungry teenager pays for snacks with a debit card
(d) a building
contractor buys lumber on account at a local lumber yard
Answer: (d)
- The
“discounting” in a discounted cash flow approach requires the use of which
of the following?
(a)
an interest rate
(b) the economic
value added
(c)
the gross margin
(d) the incremental
cost
Answer: (a)
- Risks and returns are
generally ______________ correlated.
(a)
inversely
(b) negatively
(c)
not
(d) positively
Answer: (d)
- Assuming
zero incremental costs for the “do nothing” alternative is generally
(a)
appropriate
(b) risky
(c)
optimistic
(d) realistic
Answer: (b)
- Answering
“what if” questions with respect to an economic analysis is an example of
which step in the Systematic Economic Analysis Technique?
(a)
identifying the investment alternatives
(b) defining the planning
horizon
(c)
comparing the alternatives
(d) performing supplementary
analysis
Answer: (d)
- Which of the
following is useful in making a final selection when multiple criteria
exist?
(a)
four discounted cash flow rules
(b) seven step systematic
analysis technique
(c)
ten principles of engineering economic analysis
(d) weighted factor comparison
method
Answer: (d)
- Time value of money
calculations may not be required in an economic evaluation for all of the
following reasons except
(a)
annual cash flows are proportional to the first year
cash flow
(b) inflation is
absent
(c)
no investment of capital is required
(d) no differences in
the cash flows of the alternatives after the first year
Answer: (b)
- If a
student’s time value of money rate is 30 percent, then the student would
be indifferent between $100 today and how much in one year?
(a)
$30
(b) $100
(c)
$103
(d) $130
Answer: (d)
- A bottled
mango juice drink must contain at least 17.0% mango juice for proper
taste. The drink is created by
blending unprocessed juice from two orchards. RightRipe Orchard sells unprocessed
mango juice that is 12.5% mango juice and 87.5% base liquids. PureBlend Orchard sells unprocessed
juice that is 20.0% mango juice and 80.0% base. What percentage of unprocessed juice
from each orchard is required to exactly meet the 17.0% specification?
(a)
40% RightRipe; 60% PureBlend
(b) 50% RightRipe;
50% PureBlend
(c)
60% RightRipe; 50% PureBlend
(d) Can not be
determined from the information given
Answer: (a)
- A printed circuit board
is produced by passing through a sequence of three steps. The scrap rates for steps one through
three are 5%, 3%, and 3%, respectively.
If 10,000 good parts are needed, the number that should be started
at step one is closest to which of the following?
(a)
11,100
(b) 11,140
(c)
11,190
(d) 11,240
Answer: (c)
- Reconsider
the preceding problem assuming that the sequence can be rearranged such
that the processing step with the 5% scrap rate occurs last rather than
first. Using this redesigned
sequence, the number of parts that should be started will
(a)
Increase
(b) Decrease
(c)
Be unchanged
(d) Cannot be
determined from the information given
Answer: (c)
FE-type Sample Questions for PEEA 6e Chapter 2
Chapter
2
- A deposit of
$3,000 is made in a savings account that pays 7.5% interest compounded
annually. How much money will be
available to the depositor at the end of 16 years?
(a)
$8,877
(b) $10,258
(c)
$9,542
(d) $943
Answer:
(c)
- The plan was
to leave $5,000 on deposit in a savings account for 15 years at 6.5%
interest compounded annually. It
became necessary to withdraw $1,500 at the end of the 5th year. How much will be on deposit at the end
of the 15 year period?
(a)
$11,359
(b) $9,359
(c)
$12,043
(d) $10,043
Answer:
(d)
3.
A child receives $100,000 as a gift which is
deposited in a 6% bank account compounded semiannually. If $5,000 is withdrawn at the end of each
half year, how long will the money last?
(a)
21.0 years
(b) 15.5 years
(c)
25.0 years
(d) 18.0 years
Answer:
(b)
4.
Your company seeks to take over Good Deal Company. Your company’s offer for Good Deal is for $3,000,000
in cash upon signing the agreement followed by 10 annual payments of $300,000
starting one year later. The time value
of money is 10%. What is the present
worth your company’s offer?
(a)
$3,000,000
(b) $2,281,830
(c)
$4,843,380
(d) $5,281,830
Answer:
(c)
5.
If you want to triple your money at an interest rate
of 6% per year compounded annually, for how many years would you have to leave
the money in the account?
(a)
12 years
(b) 19 years
(c)
32 years
(d) cannot be
determined without knowing the amount invested.
Answer: (b)
6.
Let F be the accumulated sum, P the principal
invested, i the annual compound interest rate, and n the number of years. Which of the following correctly relates
these quantities?
(a)
F = P (1 + in)
(b) F = P (1 + i)n
(c)
F = P (1 + n)i
(d) F = P (1 + ni)n-1
Answer: (b)
7.
The maintenance costs of a car increase by $200 each
year. This cash flow pattern is best
described by which of the following?
(a)
gradient series
(b) geometric series
(c)
infinite series
(d) uniform series
Answer: (a)
8.
If you invest $5,000 three years from now, how much
will be in the account fifteen years from now if i = 10% compounded annually.
(a)
$8,053
(b) $15,692
(c)
$20,886
(d) $27,800
Answer: (b)
9.
The president of a growing engineering firm wishes
to give each of 20 employees a holiday bonus.
How much needs to be deposited each month for a year at a 12% nominal
rate, compounded monthly, so that each employee will receive a $2,500 bonus?
(a)
$2,070
(b) $3,840
(c)
$3,940
(d) $4,170
Answer: (c)
10. What is the
annual interest rate if a simple interest loan of $10,000 for four years
charges a total of $2,800 interest? The
loan is repaid with a single payment at the end of year four.
(a)
7.0%
(b) 28.0%
(c)
i such that 12,800 = 10,000 (F|P,i,4)
(d) cannot be
determined from the information given
Answer: (a)
11. What is the
effective annual interest rate if the nominal annual interest rate is 24% per
year compounded monthly?
(a)
2.00%
(b) 24.00%
(c)
26.82%
(d) 27.12%
Answer: (c)
12. Under what circumstances
are the effective annual interest rate and the period interest rate equal?
(a)
Never true
(b) If the number of
compounding periods per year is one
(c)
If the number of compounding periods per year is
infinite
(d) Always true
Answer: (b)
13. Consider the
following cash flow diagram. What is the
value of X if the present worth of the diagram is $400 and the interest rate is
15% compounded annually?
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200
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X
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X
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0
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1
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2
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3
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(a)
$246
(b) $165
(c)
$200
(d) $146
Answer: (b)
14. A young engineer
calculated that monthly payments of $A are required to pay off a $5,000 loan
for n years at i% interest, compounded annually. If the engineer decides to borrow $10,000
instead with the same n and i%, her monthly payments will be $2A.
(a)
TRUE
(b) FALSE
(c)
Can not be determined without knowing the value of n
and i
(d) Can not be
determined without knowing the value of n or i
Answer: (a)
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