a. Assuming that investments A and B are equally risky and using the 12% discount rate, apply

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a. Assuming that investments A and B are equally risky and using the 12% discount rate, apply the present value technique to assess the acceptability of each investment and to determine the preferred investment. Explain your findings.
b. Recognizing that investment B is more risky than investment A, reassess the 2 alternatives, adding the 4% risk premium to the 12% discount rate for investment A and therefore applying a 16% discount rate to investment B. Compare your findings relative to acceptability and preference to those found for question a.
c. From your findings in questions a and b, indicate whether the yield for investment A is above or below 12% and whether that for investment B is above or below 16%. Explain.
d. Use the present value technique to estimate the yield on each investment. Compare your findings and contrast them with your response to question c.
e. From the information given, which, if either, of the 2 investments would you recommend that Dave make? Explain your answer.
f. Indicate to Dave how much money the extra $50 will have grown to by the end of 2023, assuming he makes no withdrawals from the savings account.
A. Assuming that investments A and B are equally risky

On January 1, 2014, Dave Coates, a 23-year-old mathematics teacher at Xavier High School, received a tax refund of $1,100. Because Dave didn€™t need this money for his current living expenses, he decided to make a long-term investment. After surveying a number of alternative investments costing no more than $1,100, Dave isolated 2 that seemed most suitable to his needs. Each of the investments cost $1,050 and was expected to provide income over a 10-year period. Investment A provided a relatively certain stream of income. Dave was a little less certain of the income provided by investment B. From his search for suitable alternatives, Dave found that the appropriate discount rate for a relatively certain investment was 12%. Because he felt a bit uncomfortable with an investment like B, he estimated that such an investment would have to provide a return at least 4% higher than investment A. Although Dave planned to reinvest funds returned from the investments in other vehicles providing similar returns, he wished to keep the extra $50 ($1,100 €“ $1,050) invested for the full 10 years in a savings account paying 5% interest compounded annually.
As he makes his investment decision, Dave has asked for your help in answering the questions that follow the expected return data for these investments.

Discount Rate
Depending upon the context, the discount rate has two different definitions and usages. First, the discount rate refers to the interest rate charged to the commercial banks and other financial institutions for the loans they take from the Federal...
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Fundamentals of Investing

ISBN: 978-0133075359

12th edition

Authors: Scott B. Smart, Lawrence J. Gitman, Michael D. Joehnk

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