Annuity Yes



Search:

Forecasting the Future Value of Your 403(b)

Would you like to
contribute to this site?

Annuity Menu

Submit an Article
Submit a Tip
Place your Ad
Add URL
Annuity Questions?
Contact Us


 Annuity Types 
 Compare Annuities 
 Fixed Annuity 
 Immediate Annuity 
 Annuity Calculator 
 Annuity Quote 
 Purchasing Annuities 
 Selling Your Annuity 
 Annuity Payment 
 Annuity Equity Indexed 
 Annuity Products 
 Annuity Companies 
 Annuity Services 
 Annuity Taxes 
 Annuity Information 
 Annuities 
 Financial Planning 
 Retirement 

Return To Annuity Article Archive
 

Search the Article Archives

Forecasting the Future Value of Your 403(b)

By Stephen L. Nelson, CPA


If youve got Microsoft Excel (or just about any other popular spreadsheet program) running on your computer, you can use its FV function to forecast the future value of your 403(b) account.

The FV function calculates the future value of an investment given its interest rate, the number of payments, the payment, the present value of the investment, and, optionally, the type-of-annuity switch. (More about the type-of-annuity switch a little later.)

The function uses the following syntax:

=FV(rate,nper,pmt,pv,type)

This little pretty complicated, I grant you. But suppose you want to calculate the future value of a 403(b) account thats already got $10,000 in it and to which you and your employer are contributing $200-a-month. Further suppose that you want to know the account balance--its future value--in 25 years and that you expect to earn 10% annual interest.

To calculate the future value of the 403(b) account in this case using the FV function, you enter the following into a worksheet cell:

=FV(10%/12,25*12,-200,-10000,0)

The function returns the value 385936.13--roughly $386,000 dollars.

A handful of things to note: To convert the 10% annual interest to a monthly interest rate, the formula divides the annual interest rate by 12. Similarly, to convert the 25-year term to a term in months, the formula multiplies 25 by 12.

Also, notice that the monthly payment and initial present values show as negative amounts because they represent cash outflows. And the function returns the future value amount as a positive value because it reflects a cash inflow you ultimately receive.

That 0 at the end of the function is the type-of-annuity switch. If you set the type-of-annuity switch to 1, Excel assumes payments occur at the beginning of the period (month in this case), following the annuity due convention. If you set the annuity switch to 0 or you omit the argument, Excel assumes payments occur at the end of the period following the ordinary annuity convention.


About the Author:

LLC formation author & CPA Stephen L. Nelson has written more than 150 books. Formerly an adjunct tax professor at Golden Gate University--the nations largest graduate tax school--Nelson is also the author of QuickBooks for Dummies. Copyright © by 2006 by Stephen L. Nelson, CPA. Contact him at http://www.llcsexplained.com.




clear

Get your Annuity questions answered... Subscribe to our
Annuity
Newsletter FREE!

Your First Name:

Your Email Address:



Do you have an ezine?
List your ezine in our Free Newsletter Directory!



 



Annuity Partner Sites
Copyright © Annuity Yes, 2006. All rights reserved.
Contact Us