Discounting
Discounting means converting money in the future to its equivalent value today, which helps translate money from different dates to the same "today" basis. It's an important idea in finance because it helps compare money fairly.
DCA model uses discounting to compare cash flows occurring at different times, so decisions about value can be made by having a single present value number.
Intuitive example
Because a dollar today can earn interest, having 1,000 a year from now. Discounting captures the difference by applying an interest rate to translate future amounts into today's dollars.
If you invest today at rate , it grows to by time . So discounting is just the reverse of that growth.
- Compounding =
- Discounting =
Say the interest rate () is 5%. The $1,000 () we have now will grow and become $1,051.27 () in a year (). And the 950.48.
The reason we're using is because in finance, we treat growth over time smooth and compounding continuously.
Pure discount bond
A pure discount bond is also known as a zero-coupon bond.
- Pays no periodic coupons, ie. no interest payments along the way
- Pays the face value at maturity Example:
- Pay 1,000.
- That $50 is the interest instead of paying off periodically