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Wikipedia

Compound interest

Compound interest is the addition of interest to the principal sum of a loan or deposit, or in other words, interest on principal plus interest. It is the result of reinvesting interest, or adding it to the loaned capital rather than paying it out, or requiring payment from borrower, so that interest in the next period is then earned on the principal sum plus previously accumulated interest. Compound interest is standard in finance and economics.

Effective interest rates
The effect of earning 20% annual interest on an initial $1,000 investment at various compounding frequencies

Compound interest is contrasted with simple interest, where previously accumulated interest is not added to the principal amount of the current period, so there is no compounding. The simple annual interest rate is the interest amount per period, multiplied by the number of periods per year. The simple annual interest rate is also known as the nominal interest rate (not to be confused with the interest rate not adjusted for inflation, which goes by the same name).

Compounding frequency

The compounding frequency is the number of times per year (or rarely, another unit of time) the accumulated interest is paid out, or capitalized (credited to the account), on a regular basis. The frequency could be yearly, half-yearly, quarterly, monthly, weekly, daily, or continuously (or not at all, until maturity).

For example, monthly capitalization with interest expressed as an annual rate means that the compounding frequency is 12, with time periods measured in months.

The effect of compounding depends on:

  1. The nominal interest rate which is applied and
  2. The frequency interest is compounded.

Annual equivalent rate

The nominal rate cannot be directly compared between loans with different compounding frequencies. Both the nominal interest rate and the compounding frequency are required in order to compare interest-bearing financial instruments.

To help consumers compare retail financial products more fairly and easily, many countries require financial institutions to disclose the annual compound interest rate on deposits or advances on a comparable basis. The interest rate on an annual equivalent basis may be referred to variously in different markets as effective annual percentage rate (EAPR), annual equivalent rate (AER), effective interest rate, effective annual rate, annual percentage yield and other terms. The effective annual rate is the total accumulated interest that would be payable up to the end of one year, divided by the principal sum.

There are usually two aspects to the rules defining these rates:

  1. The rate is the annualised compound interest rate, and
  2. There may be charges other than interest. The effect of fees or taxes which the customer is charged, and which are directly related to the product, may be included. Exactly which fees and taxes are included or excluded varies by country, may or may not be comparable between different jurisdictions, because the use of such terms may be inconsistent, and vary according to local practice.

Examples

 
Compound interest of 15% on initial $10,000 investment over 40 years
 
Annual dividend of 1.5% on initial $10,000 investment
$266,864 in total dividend payments over 40 years
Dividends were not reinvested in this scenario
 
Inflation compounded over 40 years at different rates
  8%
  7%
  6%
  5%
  4%
  3%
  2%
  1%
  • 1,000 Brazilian real (BRL) is deposited into a Brazilian savings account paying 20% per annum, compounded annually. At the end of one year, 1,000 × 20% = 200 BRL interest is credited to the account. The account then earns 1,200 × 20% = 240 BRL in the second year.
  • A rate of 1% per month is equivalent to a simple annual interest rate (nominal rate) of 12%, but allowing for the effect of compounding, the annual equivalent compound rate is 12.68% per annum (1.0112 − 1).
  • The interest on corporate bonds and government bonds is usually payable twice yearly. The amount of interest paid (each six months) is the disclosed interest rate divided by two and multiplied by the principal. The yearly compounded rate is higher than the disclosed rate.
  • Canadian mortgage loans are generally compounded semi-annually with monthly (or more frequent) payments.[1]
  • U.S. mortgages use an amortizing loan, not compound interest. With these loans, an amortization schedule is used to determine how to apply payments toward principal and interest. Interest generated on these loans is not added to the principal, but rather is paid off monthly as the payments are applied.
  • It is sometimes mathematically simpler, for example, in the valuation of derivatives, to use continuous compounding, which is the limit as the compounding period approaches zero. Continuous compounding in pricing these instruments is a natural consequence of Itô calculus, where financial derivatives are valued at ever increasing frequency, until the limit is approached and the derivative is valued in continuous time.

Discount instruments

  • US and Canadian T-Bills (short term Government debt) have a different convention. Their interest is calculated on a discount basis as (100 − P)/Pbnm,[clarification needed] where P is the price paid. Instead of normalizing it to a year, the interest is prorated by the number of days t: (365/t)×100. (See day count convention).

Calculation

Periodic compounding

The total accumulated value, including the principal sum   plus compounded interest  , is given by the formula:[2][3]

 

where:

  • A is the final amount
  • P is the original principal sum
  • r is the nominal annual interest rate
  • n is the compounding frequency
  • t is the overall length of time the interest is applied (expressed using the same time units as r, usually years).

The total compound interest generated is the final value minus the initial principal:[4]

 

Example 1

Suppose a principal amount of $1,500 is deposited in a bank paying an annual interest rate of 4.3%, compounded quarterly.
Then the balance after 6 years is found by using the formula above, with P = 1500, r = 0.043 (4.3%), n = 4, and t = 6:

 

So the amount A after 6 years is approximately $1,938.84.

Subtracting the original principal from this amount gives the amount of interest received:

 

Example 2

Suppose the same amount of $1,500 is compounded biennially (every 2 years). (This is very unusual in practice.) Then the balance after 6 years is found by using the formula above, with P = 1500, r = 0.043 (4.3%), n = 1/2 (the interest is compounded every two years), and t = 6 :

 

So, the balance after 6 years is approximately $1,921.24.

The amount of interest received can be calculated by subtracting the principal from this amount.

 

The interest is less compared with the previous case, as a result of the lower compounding frequency.

Accumulation function

Since the principal P is simply a coefficient, it is often dropped for simplicity, and the resulting accumulation function is used instead. The accumulation function shows what $1 grows to after any length of time.

Accumulation functions for simple and compound interest are

 
 

If  , then these two functions are the same.

Continuous compounding

As n, the number of compounding periods per year, increases without limit, the case is known as continuous compounding, in which case the effective annual rate approaches an upper limit of er − 1, where e is a mathematical constant that is the base of the natural logarithm.

Continuous compounding can be thought of as making the compounding period infinitesimally small, achieved by taking the limit as n goes to infinity. See definitions of the exponential function for the mathematical proof of this limit. The amount after t periods of continuous compounding can be expressed in terms of the initial amount P0 as

 

Force of interest

As the number of compounding periods   tends to infinity in continuous compounding, the continuous compound interest rate is referred to as the force of interest  .

In mathematics, the accumulation functions are often expressed in terms of e, the base of the natural logarithm. This facilitates the use of calculus to manipulate interest formulae.

For any continuously differentiable accumulation function a(t), the force of interest, or more generally the logarithmic or continuously compounded return is a function of time defined as follows:

 

This is the logarithmic derivative of the accumulation function.

Conversely:

 
(since  ; this can be viewed as a particular case of a product integral.)

When the above formula is written in differential equation format, then the force of interest is simply the coefficient of amount of change:

 

For compound interest with a constant annual interest rate r, the force of interest is a constant, and the accumulation function of compounding interest in terms of force of interest is a simple power of e:

 
or
 

The force of interest is less than the annual effective interest rate, but more than the annual effective discount rate. It is the reciprocal of the e-folding time. See also notation of interest rates.

A way of modeling the force of inflation is with Stoodley's formula:   where p, r and s are estimated.

Compounding basis

To convert an interest rate from one compounding basis to another compounding basis, use

 

where r1 is the interest rate with compounding frequency n1, and r2 is the interest rate with compounding frequency n2.

When interest is continuously compounded, use

 

where   is the interest rate on a continuous compounding basis, and r is the stated interest rate with a compounding frequency n.

Monthly amortized loan or mortgage payments

The interest on loans and mortgages that are amortized—that is, have a smooth monthly payment until the loan has been paid off—is often compounded monthly. The formula for payments is found from the following argument.

Exact formula for monthly payment

An exact formula for the monthly payment ( ) is

 
or equivalently
 

where:

  •   = monthly payment
  •   = principal
  •   = monthly interest rate
  •   = number of payment periods

This can be derived by considering how much is left to be repaid after each month.
The Principal remaining after the first month is

 

that is, the initial amount plus interest less the payment.
If the whole loan is repaid after one month then

 
so
 
After the second month   is left, so
 

If the whole loan was repaid after two months,

 
so
 

This equation generalises for a term of n months,  . This is a geometric series which has the sum

 
which can be rearranged to give
 
Spreadsheet formula

In spreadsheets, the PMT() function is used. The syntax is:

PMT( interest_rate, number_payments, present_value, future_value, [Type] ) 

See Excel, Mac Numbers, LibreOffice, Open Office, Google Sheets for more details.

For example, for interest rate of 6% (0.06/12), 25 years * 12 p.a., PV of $150,000, FV of 0, type of 0 gives:

= PMT(0.06/12, 25 * 12, -150000, 0, 0) = $966.45 

Approximate formula for monthly payment

A formula that is accurate to within a few percent can be found by noting that for typical U.S. note rates (  and terms  =10–30 years), the monthly note rate is small compared to 1:   so that the   which yields a simplification so that

 

which suggests defining auxiliary variables

 
 

Here   is the monthly payment required for a zero–interest loan paid off in   installments. In terms of these variables the approximation can be written

 

The function   is even:

 

implying that it can be expanded in even powers of  .

It follows immediately that   can be expanded in even powers of   plus the single term:  

It will prove convenient then to define

 

so that

 
which can be expanded:
 

where the ellipses indicate terms that are higher order in even powers of  . The expansion

 

is valid to better than 1% provided  .

Example of mortgage payment

For a $10,000 mortgage with a term of 30 years and a note rate of 4.5%, payable yearly, we find:

 
 

which gives

 

so that

 

The exact payment amount is   so the approximation is an overestimate of about a sixth of a percent.

Investing: monthly deposits

Given a principal (initial) deposit and a recurring deposit, the total return of an investment can be calculated via the compound interest gained per unit of time. If required, the interest on additional non-recurring and recurring deposits can also be defined within the same formula (see below).[5]

  •   = Principal deposit
  •   = Rate of return (monthly)
  •   = Monthly deposit, and
  •   = Time, in months

The compound interest for each deposit is:

 
and adding all recurring deposits over the total period t (i starts at 0 if deposits begin with the investment of principal; i starts at 1 if deposits begin the next month) :
 
recognizing the geometric series:   and applying the closed-form formula (common ratio : ) we obtain:
 

If two or more types of deposits occur (either recurring or non-recurring), the compound value earned can be represented as

 

where C is each lump sum and k are non-monthly recurring deposits, respectively, and x and y are the differences in time between a new deposit and the total period t is modeling.


A practical estimate for reverse calculation of the rate of return when the exact date and amount of each recurring deposit is not known, a formula that assumes a uniform recurring monthly deposit over the period, is:[6]

 
or
 

History

Compound interest when charged by lenders was once regarded as the worst kind of usury and was severely condemned by Roman law and the common laws of many other countries.[7]

The Florentine merchant Francesco Balducci Pegolotti provided a table of compound interest in his book Pratica della mercatura of about 1340. It gives the interest on 100 lire, for rates from 1% to 8%, for up to 20 years.[8] The Summa de arithmetica of Luca Pacioli (1494) gives the Rule of 72, stating that to find the number of years for an investment at compound interest to double, one should divide the interest rate into 72.

Richard Witt's book Arithmeticall Questions, published in 1613, was a landmark in the history of compound interest. It was wholly devoted to the subject (previously called anatocism), whereas previous writers had usually treated compound interest briefly in just one chapter in a mathematical textbook. Witt's book gave tables based on 10% (the then maximum rate of interest allowable on loans) and on other rates for different purposes, such as the valuation of property leases. Witt was a London mathematical practitioner and his book is notable for its clarity of expression, depth of insight and accuracy of calculation, with 124 worked examples.[9][10]

Jacob Bernoulli discovered the constant   in 1683 by studying a question about compound interest.

In the 19th century, and possibly earlier, Persian merchants used a slightly modified linear Taylor approximation to the monthly payment formula that could be computed easily in their heads.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/showdoc/cs/I-15/bo-ga:s_6//en#anchorbo-ga:s_6[permanent dead link] Interest Act (Canada), Department of Justice. The Interest Act specifies that interest is not recoverable unless the mortgage loan contains a statement showing the rate of interest chargeable, "calculated yearly or half-yearly, not in advance." In practice, banks use the half-yearly rate.
  2. ^ "Compound Interest Formula". qrc.depaul.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-05.
  3. ^ Investopedia Staff (2003-11-19). "Continuous Compounding". Investopedia. Retrieved 2018-12-05.
  4. ^ "Compound Interest Formula - Explained". www.thecalculatorsite.com. Retrieved 2018-12-05.
  5. ^ "Using Compound Interest to Optimize Investment Spread".
  6. ^ http://moneychimp.com/features/portfolio_performance_calculator.htm "recommended by The Four Pillars of Investing and The Motley Fool"
  7. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728). Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. ^ Evans, Allan (1936). Francesco Balducci Pegolotti, La Pratica della Mercatura. Cambridge, Massachusetts. pp. 301–2.
  9. ^ Lewin, C G (1970). "An Early Book on Compound Interest - Richard Witt's Arithmeticall Questions". Journal of the Institute of Actuaries. 96 (1): 121–132. doi:10.1017/S002026810001636X.
  10. ^ Lewin, C G (1981). "Compound Interest in the Seventeenth Century". Journal of the Institute of Actuaries. 108 (3): 423–442. doi:10.1017/S0020268100040865.
  11. ^ Milanfar, Peyman (1996). "A Persian Folk Method of Figuring Interest". Mathematics Magazine. 69 (5): 376. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1996.11996479.

compound, interest, addition, interest, principal, loan, deposit, other, words, interest, principal, plus, interest, result, reinvesting, interest, adding, loaned, capital, rather, than, paying, requiring, payment, from, borrower, that, interest, next, period,. Compound interest is the addition of interest to the principal sum of a loan or deposit or in other words interest on principal plus interest It is the result of reinvesting interest or adding it to the loaned capital rather than paying it out or requiring payment from borrower so that interest in the next period is then earned on the principal sum plus previously accumulated interest Compound interest is standard in finance and economics Effective interest rates The effect of earning 20 annual interest on an initial 1 000 investment at various compounding frequencies Compound interest is contrasted with simple interest where previously accumulated interest is not added to the principal amount of the current period so there is no compounding The simple annual interest rate is the interest amount per period multiplied by the number of periods per year The simple annual interest rate is also known as the nominal interest rate not to be confused with the interest rate not adjusted for inflation which goes by the same name Contents 1 Compounding frequency 2 Annual equivalent rate 3 Examples 4 Discount instruments 5 Calculation 5 1 Periodic compounding 5 1 1 Example 1 5 1 2 Example 2 5 2 Accumulation function 5 3 Continuous compounding 5 4 Force of interest 5 5 Compounding basis 5 6 Monthly amortized loan or mortgage payments 5 6 1 Exact formula for monthly payment 5 6 1 1 Spreadsheet formula 5 6 2 Approximate formula for monthly payment 5 6 3 Example of mortgage payment 5 7 Investing monthly deposits 6 History 7 See also 8 ReferencesCompounding frequency EditThe compounding frequency is the number of times per year or rarely another unit of time the accumulated interest is paid out or capitalized credited to the account on a regular basis The frequency could be yearly half yearly quarterly monthly weekly daily or continuously or not at all until maturity For example monthly capitalization with interest expressed as an annual rate means that the compounding frequency is 12 with time periods measured in months The effect of compounding depends on The nominal interest rate which is applied and The frequency interest is compounded Annual equivalent rate EditThe nominal rate cannot be directly compared between loans with different compounding frequencies Both the nominal interest rate and the compounding frequency are required in order to compare interest bearing financial instruments To help consumers compare retail financial products more fairly and easily many countries require financial institutions to disclose the annual compound interest rate on deposits or advances on a comparable basis The interest rate on an annual equivalent basis may be referred to variously in different markets as effective annual percentage rate EAPR annual equivalent rate AER effective interest rate effective annual rate annual percentage yield and other terms The effective annual rate is the total accumulated interest that would be payable up to the end of one year divided by the principal sum There are usually two aspects to the rules defining these rates The rate is the annualised compound interest rate and There may be charges other than interest The effect of fees or taxes which the customer is charged and which are directly related to the product may be included Exactly which fees and taxes are included or excluded varies by country may or may not be comparable between different jurisdictions because the use of such terms may be inconsistent and vary according to local practice Examples Edit Compound interest of 15 on initial 10 000 investment over 40 years Annual dividend of 1 5 on initial 10 000 investment 266 864 in total dividend payments over 40 years Dividends were not reinvested in this scenario Inflation compounded over 40 years at different rates 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 000 Brazilian real BRL is deposited into a Brazilian savings account paying 20 per annum compounded annually At the end of one year 1 000 20 200 BRL interest is credited to the account The account then earns 1 200 20 240 BRL in the second year A rate of 1 per month is equivalent to a simple annual interest rate nominal rate of 12 but allowing for the effect of compounding the annual equivalent compound rate is 12 68 per annum 1 0112 1 The interest on corporate bonds and government bonds is usually payable twice yearly The amount of interest paid each six months is the disclosed interest rate divided by two and multiplied by the principal The yearly compounded rate is higher than the disclosed rate Canadian mortgage loans are generally compounded semi annually with monthly or more frequent payments 1 U S mortgages use an amortizing loan not compound interest With these loans an amortization schedule is used to determine how to apply payments toward principal and interest Interest generated on these loans is not added to the principal but rather is paid off monthly as the payments are applied It is sometimes mathematically simpler for example in the valuation of derivatives to use continuous compounding which is the limit as the compounding period approaches zero Continuous compounding in pricing these instruments is a natural consequence of Ito calculus where financial derivatives are valued at ever increasing frequency until the limit is approached and the derivative is valued in continuous time Discount instruments EditUS and Canadian T Bills short term Government debt have a different convention Their interest is calculated on a discount basis as 100 P Pbnm clarification needed where P is the price paid Instead of normalizing it to a year the interest is prorated by the number of days t 365 t 100 See day count convention Calculation EditSee also Time value of money and Interest Calculation Periodic compounding Edit The total accumulated value including the principal sum P displaystyle P plus compounded interest I displaystyle I is given by the formula 2 3 A P 1 r n n t displaystyle A P left 1 frac r n right nt where A is the final amount P is the original principal sum r is the nominal annual interest rate n is the compounding frequency t is the overall length of time the interest is applied expressed using the same time units as r usually years The total compound interest generated is the final value minus the initial principal 4 I P 1 r n n t P displaystyle I P left 1 frac r n right nt P Example 1 Edit Suppose a principal amount of 1 500 is deposited in a bank paying an annual interest rate of 4 3 compounded quarterly Then the balance after 6 years is found by using the formula above with P 1500 r 0 043 4 3 n 4 and t 6 A 1500 1 0 043 4 4 6 1938 84 displaystyle A 1500 times left 1 frac 0 043 4 right 4 times 6 approx 1938 84 So the amount A after 6 years is approximately 1 938 84 Subtracting the original principal from this amount gives the amount of interest received 1938 84 1500 438 84 displaystyle 1938 84 1500 438 84 Example 2 Edit Suppose the same amount of 1 500 is compounded biennially every 2 years This is very unusual in practice Then the balance after 6 years is found by using the formula above with P 1500 r 0 043 4 3 n 1 2 the interest is compounded every two years and t 6 A 1500 1 0 043 2 6 2 1921 24 displaystyle A 1500 times 1 0 043 times 2 frac 6 2 approx 1921 24 So the balance after 6 years is approximately 1 921 24 The amount of interest received can be calculated by subtracting the principal from this amount 1921 24 1500 421 24 displaystyle 1921 24 1500 421 24 The interest is less compared with the previous case as a result of the lower compounding frequency Accumulation function Edit Since the principal P is simply a coefficient it is often dropped for simplicity and the resulting accumulation function is used instead The accumulation function shows what 1 grows to after any length of time Accumulation functions for simple and compound interest area t 1 r t displaystyle a t 1 rt a t 1 r n n t displaystyle a t left 1 frac r n right nt If n t 1 displaystyle nt 1 then these two functions are the same Continuous compounding Edit See also Logarithmic return As n the number of compounding periods per year increases without limit the case is known as continuous compounding in which case the effective annual rate approaches an upper limit of er 1 where e is a mathematical constant that is the base of the natural logarithm Continuous compounding can be thought of as making the compounding period infinitesimally small achieved by taking the limit as n goes to infinity See definitions of the exponential function for the mathematical proof of this limit The amount after t periods of continuous compounding can be expressed in terms of the initial amount P0 asP t P 0 e r t displaystyle P t P 0 e rt Force of interest Edit As the number of compounding periods n displaystyle n tends to infinity in continuous compounding the continuous compound interest rate is referred to as the force of interest d displaystyle delta In mathematics the accumulation functions are often expressed in terms of e the base of the natural logarithm This facilitates the use of calculus to manipulate interest formulae For any continuously differentiable accumulation function a t the force of interest or more generally the logarithmic or continuously compounded return is a function of time defined as follows d t a t a t d d t ln a t displaystyle delta t frac a t a t frac d dt ln a t This is the logarithmic derivative of the accumulation function Conversely a t e 0 t d s d s displaystyle a t e int 0 t delta s ds since a 0 1 displaystyle a 0 1 this can be viewed as a particular case of a product integral When the above formula is written in differential equation format then the force of interest is simply the coefficient of amount of change d a t d t a t d t displaystyle da t delta t a t dt For compound interest with a constant annual interest rate r the force of interest is a constant and the accumulation function of compounding interest in terms of force of interest is a simple power of e d ln 1 r displaystyle delta ln 1 r or a t e t d displaystyle a t e t delta The force of interest is less than the annual effective interest rate but more than the annual effective discount rate It is the reciprocal of the e folding time See also notation of interest rates A way of modeling the force of inflation is with Stoodley s formula d t p s 1 r s e s t displaystyle delta t p s over 1 rse st where p r and s are estimated Compounding basis Edit See also Day count convention To convert an interest rate from one compounding basis to another compounding basis user 2 1 r 1 n 1 n 1 n 2 1 n 2 displaystyle r 2 left left 1 frac r 1 n 1 right frac n 1 n 2 1 right n 2 where r1 is the interest rate with compounding frequency n1 and r2 is the interest rate with compounding frequency n2 When interest is continuously compounded used n ln 1 r n displaystyle delta n ln left 1 frac r n right where d displaystyle delta is the interest rate on a continuous compounding basis and r is the stated interest rate with a compounding frequency n Monthly amortized loan or mortgage payments Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Compound interest news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Mortgage calculator Monthly payment formula The interest on loans and mortgages that are amortized that is have a smooth monthly payment until the loan has been paid off is often compounded monthly The formula for payments is found from the following argument Exact formula for monthly payment Edit An exact formula for the monthly payment c displaystyle c isc r P 1 1 1 r n displaystyle c frac rP 1 frac 1 1 r n or equivalently c r P 1 e n ln 1 r displaystyle c frac rP 1 e n ln 1 r where c displaystyle c monthly payment P displaystyle P principal r displaystyle r monthly interest rate n displaystyle n number of payment periodsThis can be derived by considering how much is left to be repaid after each month The Principal remaining after the first month isP 1 1 r P c displaystyle P 1 1 r P c that is the initial amount plus interest less the payment If the whole loan is repaid after one month thenP 1 0 displaystyle P 1 0 so P c 1 r displaystyle P frac c 1 r After the second month P 2 1 r P 1 c displaystyle P 2 1 r P 1 c is left so P 2 1 r 1 r P c c displaystyle P 2 1 r 1 r P c c If the whole loan was repaid after two months P 2 0 displaystyle P 2 0 so P c 1 r c 1 r 2 displaystyle P frac c 1 r frac c 1 r 2 This equation generalises for a term of n months P c j 1 n 1 1 r j textstyle P c sum j 1 n frac 1 1 r j This is a geometric series which has the sumP c r 1 1 1 r n displaystyle P frac c r left 1 frac 1 1 r n right which can be rearranged to give c P r 1 1 1 r n P r 1 e n ln 1 r displaystyle c frac Pr 1 frac 1 1 r n frac Pr 1 e n ln 1 r Spreadsheet formula Edit In spreadsheets the PMT function is used The syntax is PMT interest rate number payments present value future value Type See Excel Mac Numbers LibreOffice Open Office Google Sheets for more details For example for interest rate of 6 0 06 12 25 years 12 p a PV of 150 000 FV of 0 type of 0 gives PMT 0 06 12 25 12 150000 0 0 966 45 Approximate formula for monthly payment Edit A formula that is accurate to within a few percent can be found by noting that for typical U S note rates I lt 8 displaystyle I lt 8 and terms T displaystyle T 10 30 years the monthly note rate is small compared to 1 r lt lt 1 displaystyle r lt lt 1 so that the ln 1 r r displaystyle ln 1 r approx r which yields a simplification so thatc P r 1 e n r P n n r 1 e n r displaystyle c approx frac Pr 1 e nr frac P n frac nr 1 e nr which suggests defining auxiliary variablesY n r I T displaystyle Y equiv nr IT c 0 P n displaystyle c 0 equiv frac P n Here c 0 displaystyle c 0 is the monthly payment required for a zero interest loan paid off in n displaystyle n installments In terms of these variables the approximation can be writtenc c 0 Y 1 e Y displaystyle c approx c 0 frac Y 1 e Y The function f Y Y 1 e Y Y 2 textstyle f Y equiv frac Y 1 e Y frac Y 2 is even f Y f Y displaystyle f Y f Y implying that it can be expanded in even powers of Y displaystyle Y It follows immediately that Y 1 e Y textstyle frac Y 1 e Y can be expanded in even powers of Y displaystyle Y plus the single term Y 2 displaystyle Y 2 It will prove convenient then to defineX 1 2 Y 1 2 I T displaystyle X frac 1 2 Y frac 1 2 IT so thatc c 0 2 X 1 e 2 X displaystyle c approx c 0 frac 2X 1 e 2X which can be expanded c c 0 1 X X 2 3 1 45 X 4 displaystyle c approx c 0 left 1 X frac X 2 3 frac 1 45 X 4 cdots right where the ellipses indicate terms that are higher order in even powers of X displaystyle X The expansionP P 0 1 X X 2 3 displaystyle P approx P 0 left 1 X frac X 2 3 right is valid to better than 1 provided X 1 displaystyle X leq 1 Example of mortgage payment Edit For a 10 000 mortgage with a term of 30 years and a note rate of 4 5 payable yearly we find T 30 displaystyle T 30 I 0 045 displaystyle I 0 045 which givesX 1 2 I T 675 displaystyle X frac 1 2 IT 675 so thatP P 0 1 X 1 3 X 2 333 33 1 675 675 2 3 608 96 displaystyle P approx P 0 left 1 X frac 1 3 X 2 right 333 33 1 675 675 2 3 608 96 The exact payment amount is P 608 02 displaystyle P 608 02 so the approximation is an overestimate of about a sixth of a percent Investing monthly deposits Edit Given a principal initial deposit and a recurring deposit the total return of an investment can be calculated via the compound interest gained per unit of time If required the interest on additional non recurring and recurring deposits can also be defined within the same formula see below 5 P displaystyle P Principal deposit r displaystyle r Rate of return monthly M displaystyle M Monthly deposit and t displaystyle t Time in monthsThe compound interest for each deposit is M M 1 r t displaystyle M M 1 r t and adding all recurring deposits over the total period t i starts at 0 if deposits begin with the investment of principal i starts at 1 if deposits begin the next month M i 0 t 1 M 1 r t i displaystyle M sum i 0 t 1 M 1 r t i recognizing the geometric series M M i 0 t 1 1 r t 1 1 r i displaystyle M M sum i 0 t 1 1 r t frac 1 1 r i and applying the closed form formula common ratio 1 1 r displaystyle 1 1 r we obtain P M 1 r t 1 r P 1 r t displaystyle P M frac 1 r t 1 r P 1 r t If two or more types of deposits occur either recurring or non recurring the compound value earned can be represented asValue M 1 r t 1 r P 1 r t k 1 r t x 1 r C 1 r t y displaystyle text Value M frac 1 r t 1 r P 1 r t k frac 1 r t x 1 r C 1 r t y where C is each lump sum and k are non monthly recurring deposits respectively and x and y are the differences in time between a new deposit and the total period t is modeling A practical estimate for reverse calculation of the rate of return when the exact date and amount of each recurring deposit is not known a formula that assumes a uniform recurring monthly deposit over the period is 6 r P P M P M 2 1 t displaystyle r left frac P P sum M P sum M 2 right 1 t or r P M 2 P M 2 1 t 1 displaystyle r left frac P sum M 2 P sum M 2 right 1 t 1 History EditFurther information Interest History Compound interest when charged by lenders was once regarded as the worst kind of usury and was severely condemned by Roman law and the common laws of many other countries 7 The Florentine merchant Francesco Balducci Pegolotti provided a table of compound interest in his book Pratica della mercatura of about 1340 It gives the interest on 100 lire for rates from 1 to 8 for up to 20 years 8 The Summa de arithmetica of Luca Pacioli 1494 gives the Rule of 72 stating that to find the number of years for an investment at compound interest to double one should divide the interest rate into 72 Richard Witt s book Arithmeticall Questions published in 1613 was a landmark in the history of compound interest It was wholly devoted to the subject previously called anatocism whereas previous writers had usually treated compound interest briefly in just one chapter in a mathematical textbook Witt s book gave tables based on 10 the then maximum rate of interest allowable on loans and on other rates for different purposes such as the valuation of property leases Witt was a London mathematical practitioner and his book is notable for its clarity of expression depth of insight and accuracy of calculation with 124 worked examples 9 10 Jacob Bernoulli discovered the constant e displaystyle e in 1683 by studying a question about compound interest In the 19th century and possibly earlier Persian merchants used a slightly modified linear Taylor approximation to the monthly payment formula that could be computed easily in their heads 11 See also Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Compound interest Look up interest in Wiktionary the free dictionary Credit card interest Exponential growth Fisher equation Interest Interest rate Rate of return Rate of return on investment Real versus nominal value economics Yield curveReferences Edit http laws justice gc ca en showdoc cs I 15 bo ga s 6 en anchorbo ga s 6 permanent dead link Interest Act Canada Department of Justice The Interest Act specifies that interest is not recoverable unless the mortgage loan contains a statement showing the rate of interest chargeable calculated yearly or half yearly not in advance In practice banks use the half yearly rate Compound Interest Formula qrc depaul edu Retrieved 2018 12 05 Investopedia Staff 2003 11 19 Continuous Compounding Investopedia Retrieved 2018 12 05 Compound Interest Formula Explained www thecalculatorsite com Retrieved 2018 12 05 Using Compound Interest to Optimize Investment Spread http moneychimp com features portfolio performance calculator htm recommended by The Four Pillars of Investing and The Motley Fool This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences 1st ed James and John Knapton et al a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Evans Allan 1936 Francesco Balducci Pegolotti La Pratica della Mercatura Cambridge Massachusetts pp 301 2 Lewin C G 1970 An Early Book on Compound Interest Richard Witt s Arithmeticall Questions Journal of the Institute of Actuaries 96 1 121 132 doi 10 1017 S002026810001636X Lewin C G 1981 Compound Interest in the Seventeenth Century Journal of the Institute of Actuaries 108 3 423 442 doi 10 1017 S0020268100040865 Milanfar Peyman 1996 A Persian Folk Method of Figuring Interest Mathematics Magazine 69 5 376 doi 10 1080 0025570X 1996 11996479 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Compound interest amp oldid 1136773800, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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