Topics
Track your progress across all skills in your objective. Mark your confidence level and identify areas to focus on.
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress across all skills in your objective. Mark your confidence level and identify areas to focus on.
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress across all skills in your objective. Mark your confidence level and identify areas to focus on.
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
where FV is the future value, PV is the present value, n is the number of years, and r% is the annual depreciation rate of the item.
where FV is the future value, PV is the present value, n is the number of years, k is the number of compounding periods per year, and r% is the nominal annual rate of interest.
You should understand the meaning of each variable and know how to use your calculator's Finance/TVM Solver:
To solve for an unknown, move your calculator's cursor to the unfilled slot and press alpha → enter.
Be very careful if P/Y is different from C/Y. The letter N will always be the number of payment periods, or in other words the number of years times P/Y.
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.
The real interest rate (needed when a question involves inflation) is given by r%=c%−i%, where c% represents the given interest rate (the nominal rate) and i% represents the inflation rate.
Note: You can calculate the real interest rate r% and enter it directly into the TVM solver (when required) as the nominal annual interest rate (I% on your calculator), since the TVM solver does not account for inflation effects in its standard calculations.
A loan is when money is borrowed and later repaid over time. In the IB (and most real world settings), the person who borrows money agrees to make a payment at regular intervals (for example monthly or yearly).
As a reward for the person who lends (gives) the money, the borrower also pays interest, typically a percentage of the loan amount. The payment amount is calculated such that the loan is fully repaid (with interest) by the end of an agreed upon period of time.
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.
In IB, loans are paid off at the end of a number of periods (N) and have an annual interest rate (I%), an initial balance (PV), a fixed payment (PMT), and an outstanding balance (FV). Payments per year and compounds per year typically occur at the same frequency (P/Y, C/Y).
You can use the TVM solver with loans to find any of those variables if you know all the others.
An annuity is a type of account that a person can live off when they retire. They make regular withdrawals, and the interest on the account allows the money to last longer. The money in an annuity account is often built up over a lifetime of saving and compounding, but it can also be deposited in a lump-sum.
Effectively, an annuity is the reverse of a loan. Instead of the bank lending you money, you lend the bank money, and they make regular repayments back to you over time.
You should be able to use the TVM Solver on your calculator to perform calculations with annuities.
In IB, annuities are paid at the end of a number of periods (N) and have an annual interest rate (I%), an initial lump-sum deposit (PV), a fixed payment (PMT) and a future value (FV), which represents the total accumulated amount at the end of the term.
In the special case of annuities, payments and compounding occur can occur at different same frequencies (P/Y & C/Y).
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.
Track your progress across all skills in your objective. Mark your confidence level and identify areas to focus on.
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
Track your progress:
Don't know
Working on it
Confident
📖 = included in formula booklet • 🚫 = not in formula booklet
where FV is the future value, PV is the present value, n is the number of years, and r% is the annual depreciation rate of the item.
where FV is the future value, PV is the present value, n is the number of years, k is the number of compounding periods per year, and r% is the nominal annual rate of interest.
You should understand the meaning of each variable and know how to use your calculator's Finance/TVM Solver:
To solve for an unknown, move your calculator's cursor to the unfilled slot and press alpha → enter.
Be very careful if P/Y is different from C/Y. The letter N will always be the number of payment periods, or in other words the number of years times P/Y.
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.
The real interest rate (needed when a question involves inflation) is given by r%=c%−i%, where c% represents the given interest rate (the nominal rate) and i% represents the inflation rate.
Note: You can calculate the real interest rate r% and enter it directly into the TVM solver (when required) as the nominal annual interest rate (I% on your calculator), since the TVM solver does not account for inflation effects in its standard calculations.
A loan is when money is borrowed and later repaid over time. In the IB (and most real world settings), the person who borrows money agrees to make a payment at regular intervals (for example monthly or yearly).
As a reward for the person who lends (gives) the money, the borrower also pays interest, typically a percentage of the loan amount. The payment amount is calculated such that the loan is fully repaid (with interest) by the end of an agreed upon period of time.
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.
In IB, loans are paid off at the end of a number of periods (N) and have an annual interest rate (I%), an initial balance (PV), a fixed payment (PMT), and an outstanding balance (FV). Payments per year and compounds per year typically occur at the same frequency (P/Y, C/Y).
You can use the TVM solver with loans to find any of those variables if you know all the others.
An annuity is a type of account that a person can live off when they retire. They make regular withdrawals, and the interest on the account allows the money to last longer. The money in an annuity account is often built up over a lifetime of saving and compounding, but it can also be deposited in a lump-sum.
Effectively, an annuity is the reverse of a loan. Instead of the bank lending you money, you lend the bank money, and they make regular repayments back to you over time.
You should be able to use the TVM Solver on your calculator to perform calculations with annuities.
In IB, annuities are paid at the end of a number of periods (N) and have an annual interest rate (I%), an initial lump-sum deposit (PV), a fixed payment (PMT) and a future value (FV), which represents the total accumulated amount at the end of the term.
In the special case of annuities, payments and compounding occur can occur at different same frequencies (P/Y & C/Y).
Whenever you use the Finance App (TVM Solver) on your calculator, it's critical that you enter and interpret the signs correctly:
When you receive money from a bank or savings account, that value is positive, because you're gaining money.
When you send money to a bank, that value is negative, because you're losing money.