Discounted Present Value - measuring stick for determining what the value of a future payment

February 11, 2009 14:13 by TakeDaRisk



Do you have a structured settlement? The structured settlement cash now guide can help you get a cash payment quote. Find out how to - Cash In a Structured Settlement.

> Free Consultation - Get structured settlement help regarding selling your annuity future payments. HAVE A Structured Settlement Purchaser Factoring Representative Contact YOU, this site will forward your questions & requests to an established finance representative/company.


Discounted Present Value

The “discounted present value” is a measuring stick for determining what the value of a future payment (i.e., a payment that is due in the year 2057) is today. Hence, the discounted present value of a payment corrects for inflation and the principle that money available today is worth more than money not accessible for 50 years (or some future time). However, the discounted present value is not the same thing as market value (what someone is willing to pay). Basically, a calculation that discounts a future payment based on IRS rates is an artificial number since it has no bearing on the payment’s actual selling price. For example, in Henderson Receivables Origination, it is somewhat confusing for the court to evaluate future payments totaling $63,364,94 based the discounted present value of $50,933.18 because that is not the market value of the payments. In other words, the annuitant couldn’t go out and get $50,933.18 for his future payments because no person or company would be willing to pay that much.


Another term commonly used in factoring transactions is “discounted present value,” which is defined in the NCOIL model transfer act as “the present value of future payments determined by discounting such payments to the present using the most recently published Applicable Federal Rate for determining the present value of an annuity, as issued by the United States Internal Revenue Service.” [18] The IRS discount rate, also known as the Applicable Federal Rate (AFR), is used to determine the charitable deduction for many types of planned gifts, such as charitable remainder trusts and gift annuities. The rate is the annual rate of return that the IRS assumes the gift assets will earn during the gift term.
11. February 2009 14:13 by TakeDaRisk | Permalink

Cash Now

Do you own a structured settlement?  This web site is to help settlement owners understand cash now options.  This structured settlement cash now guide is a resource for answers and questions. Get information on how to sell and get cash for your structured settlement by reading and posting n this blog. You may be able to trade your future structured settlement payments for cash now. If your settlement qualifies then getting "cash now" takes 30-90 days on average.

Need Cash For Your Injury Settlement?
Peachtree - Peachtree can help you get cash now if you own an annuity or structured settlement, visit Peachtree website for a free Peachtree quote.

Blog Directory
Technorati Profile
Add to Technorati Favorites
World Blog Directory
lawyer blogs

Recent Comments

Comment RSS

Calendar

<<  May 2012  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
30123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031123
45678910

View posts in large calendar