TIMEVALUE Function
Returns the equivalent of a reference amount at
a base date by using variable interest rates.
Syntax
Required Arguments
base-date
is a SAS date. The
value that is returned is the time value of reference-amount at base-date.
reference-date
is a SAS date. reference-date is the date of reference-amount.
reference-amount
is numeric. reference-amount is the amount at reference-date.
compounding-interval
is a SAS interval. compounding-interval is the compounding interval.
date
is a SAS date. Each
date is paired with a rate. date is the time that rate takes
effect.
rate
is a numeric percentage.
Each rate is paired with a date. rate is the interest rate that starts on date.
Details
The following details
apply to the TIMEVALUE function:
-
The values for rates must be between
–99 and 120.
-
The list of date-rate pairs does
not need to be sorted by date.
-
When multiple rate changes occur
on a single date, the TIMEVALUE function applies only the final rate
that is listed for that date.
-
Simple interest is applied for
partial periods.
-
There must be a valid date-rate
pair whose date is at or prior to both the
reference-date and the
base-date.
Example
-
You can express the accumulated
value of an investment of $1,000 at a nominal interest rate of 10%
compounded monthly for one year as the following:
amount_base1 = TIMEVALUE("01jan2001"d, "01jan2000"d, 1000,
"MONTH", "01jan2000"d, 10);
-
If the interest rate jumps to 20%
halfway through the year, the resulting calculation would be as follows:
amount_base2 = TIMEVALUE("01jan2001"d, "01jan2000"d, 1000,
"MONTH", 01jan2000"d, 10, "01jan2000"d, 20);
-
The date-rate pairs do not need
to be sorted by date. This flexibility allows amount_base2 and amount_base3
to assume the same value:
amount_base3 = TIMEVALUE("01jan2001"d, "01jan2000"d, 1000,
"MONTH", "01jul2000"d, 20, "01jan2000"d, 10);