Why We Use It in the Stock Market
When people buy stocks, they're not just buying pieces of companies, they're betting that those companies will grow and be worth more in the future. But since money is worth more now than later (because you can save or invest it), we use a discount rate to figure out how much a company's future earnings are worth today.
How It Works with Real Money
Think of it like this: If your friend says they’ll give you $10 in one year, but you could earn 5% interest on your savings, the real value of that $10 right now is less. You’d rather have a little less money today than wait for more later, especially if you can grow that small amount into something bigger.
So, when people look at a company’s future earnings and decide how much it's worth today, they use the discount rate to turn those big numbers from tomorrow into smaller, more realistic ones right now. That helps them know whether buying a stock is like trading your toy car for a bike, or maybe even a spaceship!
Examples
- A discount rate is like a price tag for money: the higher it is, the less future money is worth today.
- If you expect to earn $100 in one year and the discount rate is 10%, that $100 is only worth about $90 today.
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See also
- How The Stock Exchange Works (For Dummies)?
- How Does Comparable Company Analysis Excel Walkthrough | Valuation Multiples Work?
- What are traders?
- Why Stock Prices Go Up and Down?
- What is Price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio?