Would the PV be the cash price as you mentioned and the FV be the face value or par value of 100?@ckat, I'm not as familiar with HP 12C, but if convention is similar I can walk you through based on inputs in BA II Plus.
PV=-104
FV=104
N=6 (6 is used because this is the # of periods, ex. 3 years compounded semi-annually)
PMT=4 (coupon is half for same reason, coupon per 6 months)
compute (CPT) I/Y = 3.774
*2 for to scale to annual yield = 7.548%
Slightly off due to compounding.
Note that in BA II Plus this also required the adjusting of P/Y and C/Y (example in link below). Payments per year defaults to 12 in the BA II Plus so I changed to 1 to reflect a single payment per period N. Additionally, per suggestion online I adjusted C/Y to 1mm to have a close reflection to continuous compounding.
http://www2.fiu.edu/~barberj/quick.pdf
https://epsstore.ti.com/OA_HTML/csksxvm.jsp?nSetId=84339
@David Harper CFA FRM CIPM, can you please answer a couple of questions, as I found this thread after encountering a few issues of my own attempting to work out this formula via BA II Plus a second time around w/ a calculator instead of paper & pen.
- In general, is it your impression that the answers for these questions typically will be spaced far enough apart that differences in compounding will not cause for significant pause when evaluating the correct answer? I believe I saw in a prior thread a statement by you regarding correspondence w/ GARP related to this matter, but just want to be sure.
- Are there any other caveats that should be considered when adjusting P/Y and C/Y on the BA II Plus? Or in general using TVM functions? I want to try and become as fluid as possible before the exam using my calculator to solve these problems.
Thanks in advance for your reply.