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question about Net present value way of calculation
hello,
i'm trying to reprogram the NPV function as in Excel but i can't seem to understand how excel gets the result it is giving for instance in the help i see this example: annual discount rate: 10% initial cost: 10000 return first year: 3000 return second year: 4200 return third year: 6800 Can someone explain me (step by step) how excel is giving me the result of 1188.44? i thought it was: 3000/1.1 + 4200/1.21 + 6800/1.331 but that gives me something else? Any help would be appreciated, Stig |
question about Net present value way of calculation
I'm getting 11,307.28. I am using .1 as the rate and 3,000, 4,200, 6,800 as
Values 1-3. Are you putting the 10,000 in? "Stig" wrote: hello, i'm trying to reprogram the NPV function as in Excel but i can't seem to understand how excel gets the result it is giving for instance in the help i see this example: annual discount rate: 10% initial cost: 10000 return first year: 3000 return second year: 4200 return third year: 6800 Can someone explain me (step by step) how excel is giving me the result of 1188.44? i thought it was: 3000/1.1 + 4200/1.21 + 6800/1.331 but that gives me something else? Any help would be appreciated, Stig |
question about Net present value way of calculation
don't bother using preset excel functions for financial calculations as
they are not accurate! they can employ some1 to write a billion lines of code, but no1 who understands basic financial modelling. you are best to set out the cashflow etc in an excel and map the individual calculations lk wrote: I'm getting 11,307.28. I am using .1 as the rate and 3,000, 4,200, 6,800 as Values 1-3. Are you putting the 10,000 in? "Stig" wrote: hello, i'm trying to reprogram the NPV function as in Excel but i can't seem to understand how excel gets the result it is giving for instance in the help i see this example: annual discount rate: 10% initial cost: 10000 return first year: 3000 return second year: 4200 return third year: 6800 Can someone explain me (step by step) how excel is giving me the result of 1188.44? i thought it was: 3000/1.1 + 4200/1.21 + 6800/1.331 but that gives me something else? Any help would be appreciated, Stig |
question about Net present value way of calculation
Stig wrote:
i'm trying to reprogram the NPV function as in Excel but i can't seem to understand how excel gets the result it is giving for instance in the help i see this example: annual discount rate: 10% initial cost: 10000 return first year: 3000 return second year: 4200 return third year: 6800 Can someone explain me (step by step) how excel is giving me the result of 1188.44? i thought it was: 3000/1.1 + 4200/1.21 + 6800/1.331 but that gives me something else? It is neither. The NPV of the cash flows is -10000 + 3000/(1+10%) + 4200/(1+10%)^2 + 6800*(1+10%)^3, which is 1307.29. What you describe is the NPV of the cash flows without the initial cost. If that is what you want, your formula is correct. It is always a good practice to explain how you use the function you are asking about. I presume you wrote NPV(10%,-10000,3000,4200,6800). You should have written -10000+NPV(10%,3000,4200,6800), which results in 1307.29, or omit -10000 if you want the cash flow without the initial cost and you get 11307.29, as your discrete formula does. The "problem" is clear if you read the NPV help text. Excel's NPV() assumes that the first "value" parameter should be discounted. In normal NPV usage, that means the first "value" parameter is CF1, not CF0. ("CFn" is the n-th cash flow.) If you include -10000 as the first "value" parameter, you are computing the cash flow 0 - 10000/(1+10%) + 3000/(1+10%)^2 + 4200/(1+10%)^3 + 6800*(1+10%)^4, which is probably not what you want. |
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