TVM 2$days
TVM Tuesdays is a weekly blog that offers a fun, new take on this age-old topic and financial education insights from Brent Pritchard.
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Finance Students, Watch Out for This Red Flag.
When your time comes, I hope you get the chance to work with a living legend in your industry like the opportunity my former colleagues and I had.
There were lots of things that made the man special. One was his intuition. “Never make a loan to a person who drives a red sports car.” Why? Because they’ll never make the first payment: true story. He not only had a tremendous amount of smarts but a smile that made people smile and stories that made them belly laugh. Two that come to mind are the “Elk Meat” story and the one about the borrower who chose not to lay into him because the man thought he had brought his son, a coworker who shared the same last name but no relation, to the face-to-face meeting.
A woman, who will remain nameless, who works as a waitress has learned to watch out when a child orders the filet. Why? Chaos will ensue: you’re likely to get “talked up to.” Whether the meat is red or not on the inside, this gets to the same point: learn from past experiences.
This image was created with the assistance of DALL·E and prompts from Brent Pritchard.
A red flag in finance is that many aspiring finance professionals, dare I say most, don’t know how to manipulate the investment yield. (You can insert “interest rate” if you haven’t yet been enlightened by the fact that a non-interest bearing asset can also potentially compound.)
Here’s an excerpt from my book Would Your Boomerang Return? What Birds, Hurdlers, and Boomerangs Can Teach Us About the Time Value of Money (2023):
Before Clayton John made the trek to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, financial calculator in hand, responding to the job posting he saw in the Wall Street Journal and would later get, he was a high school math teacher in Albert City, Iowa.
I love this story for a lot of reasons. First and foremost, it showcases an important sequence that many people outright ignore. First comes the math, then comes the finance.
What do you estimate for the true quarterly investment yield based on an effective annual interest rate of 10.3813% with monthly compounding? (The answer isn’t 2.5953% and it’s definitely not 3.4604%, nor is it 2.6178% and it’s definitely not 3.5056%. It’s 2.5%.)
Brent Pritchard is an author and college finance educator with over two decades of industry experience and cofounder of Boxholm Press, LLC, a family-owned-and-operated publishing company providing educational content, products, and services. He pioneers an innovative and approachable new way of learning and teaching the Time Value of Money as well as thought leadership in other business topics. His most recent book is Would Your Boomerang Return? You can contact him on his website here.
You Heard It Here First: Merry Christmas!
As we celebrate the “Happy Holidays,” I hope I’m one of many to wish you a “Merry Christmas.” Tis the season to take a little time off work, which reminds me of one of my favorite things to find in a legal document when I was practicing real estate:
“[Intentionally left blank]”
Not many people would call the act of reviewing complex legal documents fun like playing the guitar, for example. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, here’s something one can’t help but love to read (after tearing through wrapping paper):
Photo by Brent Pritchard.
How do you plan to celebrate with the gift that comes from Nazareth?
Brent Pritchard is an author and college finance lecturer with over two decades of industry experience and cofounder of Boxholm Press, LLC, a family-owned-and-operated publishing company providing educational content, products, and services. He pioneers an innovative and approachable new way of learning and teaching the Time Value of Money as well as thought leadership in other business topics. His most recent book is Would Your Boomerang Return? You can contact him on his website here.
1.21 Gigawatts!
It was in an accounting class all about debits and credits that I figured out I wanted to study finance. Before I became a finance professional, I also had to take that economics class where it seemed like every day all they talked about was widgets. Since not everyone earns or spends in US dollars, it’s about time we had a name for an unnamed currency in finance that fits the bill. Enter the gigawatt.
I know, I know, a gigawatt is a unit of power. But I wouldn’t know that, and it might not ring a bell for you, had it not been for the Hollywood blockbuster Back to the Future. This movie was an instant classic.
In an introductory finance class, a classic first example that communicates the power of compound “interest” might be presented as follows (in the gigawatt currency):
1.00 gigawatt
10% interest rate (what I can’t help but specify is the true investment yield)
2-year investment period
This example assumes that there are no recurring payments (other deposits or withdrawals) over the investment period. (See why the word interest is so last year: there is a spectrum of investments, some that pay interest and some that don’t, which is why investment yield is a better way of thinking about return on investment.)
Copyright 2024 Brent Pritchard. All rights reserved.
What do you estimate for the future value of a 1.00 gigawatt investment after two years assuming a 10% true annual investment yield? 1.21 gigawatts!
Brent Pritchard is an author and college finance lecturer with over two decades of industry experience and cofounder of Boxholm Press, LLC, a family-owned-and-operated publishing company providing educational content, products, and services. He pioneers an innovative and approachable new way of learning and teaching the Time Value of Money as well as thought leadership in other business topics. His most recent book is Would Your Boomerang Return? You can contact him on his website here.
Get the Book Today!
Would Your Boomerang Return? provides a fun, new take on how the Mathematics of Finance is learned and taught:
All-in-one resource: all the important information on this all-important topic in one place with chapters in the What and How sections that double as individual lessons
Ease of reference: includes the first-of-its-kind user manual for the Mathematics of Finance with chapters named after sections typically found in an actual user manual for quick look up
Simple and definitive tool: 3-Step Systematic Approach for analyzing and evaluating real-world Time Value of Money situations
Decision-making framework: 23 real-world Time Value of Money questions, space to work out answers, and a "baseball count" system to evaluate understanding of the different types of questions
An easy read: complete with sprinklings of real-life stories and maybe even an ounce of inspiration here and there
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