Julia's Maximum Future Consumption from Investment (0, 168)
This point represents a scenario on Julia's investment-based feasible frontier where she allocates the entire borrowed amount of $56 to her car repair investment. By forgoing any consumption now, she maximizes her future consumption, which would total $168, calculated as 3 times the invested amount.
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Julia's Maximum Future Consumption from Investment (0, 168)
Marginal Rate of Transformation of Investment into Future Income
An entrepreneur has an opportunity to invest in a new project. The project requires an initial outlay which can be fully financed by borrowing up to $100. For every dollar invested in the project, the entrepreneur will receive $2.50 in future income (a 150% rate of return). On a graph with 'Consumption Now' on the horizontal axis and 'Consumption Later' on the vertical axis, which of the following best represents the endpoints of the new feasible frontier created by this investment opportunity?
Investment Decision Analysis
Interpreting an Investment Opportunity Frontier
An individual can borrow up to a certain limit to finance a project. This investment opportunity creates a new linear feasible frontier of possible 'consumption now' and 'consumption later' combinations. If the rate of return on this project were to increase, while the borrowing limit remained unchanged, this new feasible frontier would shift outward in a parallel fashion.
An individual is considering several investment opportunities. Each opportunity, if taken, creates a new set of possible combinations for consumption now versus consumption later, represented by a straight-line feasible frontier. Match each Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT), which represents the slope of the frontier, to the description of the investment opportunity it corresponds to.
An individual has an opportunity to borrow up to $56 to fund a project. For every dollar invested in the project, they will receive $3 in future income. This relationship can be represented by a straight-line feasible frontier on a graph of 'consumption now' versus 'consumption later'. If this individual chooses to consume $20 now, the maximum amount they can consume later is $____.
An individual has no current income but has access to a loan that can be used to fund either immediate consumption or a productive investment. Arrange the following steps in the correct logical order to construct the feasible frontier representing all possible combinations of 'consumption now' and 'consumption later'.
Evaluating Competing Investment Opportunities
An individual has an investment opportunity that can be funded entirely by borrowing. This opportunity is represented by a linear feasible frontier on a graph with 'Consumption Now' on the horizontal axis and 'Consumption Later' on the vertical axis. An analyst makes the following claim: 'If the maximum amount you can borrow for this project increases, while the project's rate of return remains constant, the investment itself becomes more profitable.' Which of the following best evaluates this claim?
An entrepreneur has an opportunity to invest in a new project. They can borrow up to $50,000 at an interest rate of 12% to fund the project. For every dollar invested, the project is expected to generate $1.90 in future income. On a graph with 'Consumption Now' on the horizontal axis and 'Consumption Later' on the vertical axis, what is the Marginal Rate of Transformation (the absolute value of the slope) of the new feasible frontier created by this investment opportunity?
Figure 9.13: Julia's Feasible Frontiers for Borrowing and Investment
Learn After
An individual has an opportunity to borrow up to $80 to fund a specific project. This project yields a total return of 150% on the amount invested. If the individual borrows the maximum amount, invests all of it in the project, and forgoes all consumption in the present, what is the total amount of money they will have in the future?
Evaluating an Investment Decision
Analyzing an Investment Trade-Off
An individual is presented with an investment opportunity that allows them to borrow funds and invest them for a positive return. On the graph representing their consumption possibilities (with current consumption on the horizontal axis and future consumption on the vertical axis), the point where the feasible frontier intersects the vertical axis represents a choice where the individual prioritizes immediate spending over future gains.
Optimal Investment Choice
An entrepreneur can borrow up to $10,000 to invest in a new piece of equipment. The investment is expected to generate a total future value of 2.5 times the initial amount invested. The entrepreneur's consumption possibilities can be plotted on a graph with 'Current Consumption' on the horizontal axis and 'Future Consumption' on the vertical axis. What does the point where the feasible frontier intersects the vertical axis signify?
Deconstructing Investment Returns
Evaluating an Extreme Investment Strategy
Evaluating an Absolute Investment Rule
Reconstructing an Investment Decision