Calculating Present Value in Excel with HP-12CID: Q67700
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The calculation of the present value (PV) in Excel does not match
HP-12C calculations when the period (nper) IS NOT an integer. The
discrepancy is that HP-12C calculates the odd period differently than
Excel does. The odd period will automatically be calculated at the
beginning of the period. Odd period, by definition, is the partial
payment (for example, in nper=48.5, .5 is the odd period).
According to Hewlett-Packard (HP) technical support, the HP-12C
does the following:
Rate: 1.25%; nper: 48, 48.5, 49; Payment: 150 Type: End
Using the above arguments, the Excel calculation will yield the
following PV results:
@ nper = 48 PV = 5389.722136
@ nper = 48.5 PV = 5430.653043
@ nper = 49 PV = 5471.330505
Using the above arguments, the HP-12C calculation will yield the
following PV results:
@ n = 48 PV = 5389.722136
@ n = 48.5 PV = 5356.245601
@ n = 49 PV = 5471.330505
If you want to use HP-12C to calculate like Excel's calculation for
odd number of periods, contact HP Calculator Technical Support at
(503) 757-2004 and ask for the booklet "HP-12C Solutions." See section
12-8 titled "Actual Calculations" in the booklet. Reprogram the HP-12C
with the step-by-step instruction provided in the booklet. Then,
follow the steps provided on page 51 of the "HP-12C Owner's Manual and
Problem-Solving Guide."
The later versions of the HP calculators will calculate the odd period
at the END. Such calculators include the HP-19B2, HP-17B2, HP-10B,
HP-37E, HP-38E/C, and HP-18C.
Additional query words: 2.0 2.00 2.1 2.10 2.2 2.20 2.21 3.0 4.0 ppmt
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Last Reviewed: March 21, 1999