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Rule of 72

In finance, the rule of 72, the rule of 70[1] and the rule of 69.3 are methods for estimating an investment's doubling time. The rule number (e.g., 72) is divided by the interest percentage per period (usually years) to obtain the approximate number of periods required for doubling. Although scientific calculators and spreadsheet programs have functions to find the accurate doubling time, the rules are useful for mental calculations and when only a basic calculator is available.[2]

These rules apply to exponential growth and are therefore used for compound interest as opposed to simple interest calculations. They can also be used for decay to obtain a halving time. The choice of number is mostly a matter of preference: 69 is more accurate for continuous compounding, while 72 works well in common interest situations and is more easily divisible. There are a number of variations to the rules that improve accuracy. For periodic compounding, the exact doubling time for an interest rate of r percent per period is

,

where t is the number of periods required. The formula above can be used for more than calculating the doubling time. If one wants to know the tripling time, for example, replace the constant 2 in the numerator with 3. As another example, if one wants to know the number of periods it takes for the initial value to rise by 50%, replace the constant 2 with 1.5.

Using the rule to estimate compounding periods Edit

To estimate the number of periods required to double an original investment, divide the most convenient "rule-quantity" by the expected growth rate, expressed as a percentage.

  • For instance, if you were to invest $100 with compounding interest at a rate of 9% per annum, the rule of 72 gives 72/9 = 8 years required for the investment to be worth $200; an exact calculation gives ln(2)/ln(1+0.09) = 8.0432 years.

Similarly, to determine the time it takes for the value of money to halve at a given rate, divide the rule quantity by that rate.

  • To determine the time for money's buying power to halve, financiers divide the rule-quantity by the inflation rate. Thus at 3.5% inflation using the rule of 70, it should take approximately 70/3.5 = 20 years for the value of a unit of currency to halve.[1]
  • To estimate the impact of additional fees on financial policies (e.g., mutual fund fees and expenses, loading and expense charges on variable universal life insurance investment portfolios), divide 72 by the fee. For example, if the Universal Life policy charges an annual 3% fee over and above the cost of the underlying investment fund, then the total account value will be cut to 50% in 72 / 3 = 24 years, and then to 25% of the value in 48 years, compared to holding exactly the same investment outside the policy.

Choice of rule Edit

The value 72 is a convenient choice of numerator, since it has many small divisors: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 12. It provides a good approximation for annual compounding, and for compounding at typical rates (from 6% to 10%); the approximations are less accurate at higher interest rates.

For continuous compounding, 69 gives accurate results for any rate, since ln(2) is about 69.3%; see derivation below. Since daily compounding is close enough to continuous compounding, for most purposes 69, 69.3 or 70 are better than 72 for daily compounding. For lower annual rates than those above, 69.3 would also be more accurate than 72.[3] For higher annual rates, 78 is more accurate.

 
Graphs comparing doubling times and half lives of exponential growths (bold lines) and decay (faint lines), and their 70/t and 72/t approximations. In the SVG version, hover over a graph to highlight it and its complement.
Rate Actual Years Rate × Actual Years Rule of 72 Rule of 70 Rule of 69.3 72 adjusted E-M rule
0.25% 277.605 69.401 288.000 280.000 277.200 277.667 277.547
0.5% 138.976 69.488 144.000 140.000 138.600 139.000 138.947
1% 69.661 69.661 72.000 70.000 69.300 69.667 69.648
2% 35.003 70.006 36.000 35.000 34.650 35.000 35.000
3% 23.450 70.349 24.000 23.333 23.100 23.444 23.452
4% 17.673 70.692 18.000 17.500 17.325 17.667 17.679
5% 14.207 71.033 14.400 14.000 13.860 14.200 14.215
6% 11.896 71.374 12.000 11.667 11.550 11.889 11.907
7% 10.245 71.713 10.286 10.000 9.900 10.238 10.259
8% 9.006 72.052 9.000 8.750 8.663 9.000 9.023
9% 8.043 72.389 8.000 7.778 7.700 8.037 8.062
10% 7.273 72.725 7.200 7.000 6.930 7.267 7.295
11% 6.642 73.061 6.545 6.364 6.300 6.636 6.667
12% 6.116 73.395 6.000 5.833 5.775 6.111 6.144
15% 4.959 74.392 4.800 4.667 4.620 4.956 4.995
18% 4.188 75.381 4.000 3.889 3.850 4.185 4.231
20% 3.802 76.036 3.600 3.500 3.465 3.800 3.850
25% 3.106 77.657 2.880 2.800 2.772 3.107 3.168
30% 2.642 79.258 2.400 2.333 2.310 2.644 2.718
40% 2.060 82.402 1.800 1.750 1.733 2.067 2.166
50% 1.710 85.476 1.440 1.400 1.386 1.720 1.848
60% 1.475 88.486 1.200 1.167 1.155 1.489 1.650
70% 1.306 91.439 1.029 1.000 0.990 1.324 1.523

Note: The most accurate value on each row is in italics, and the most accurate of the simpler rules in bold.

History Edit

An early reference to the rule is in the Summa de arithmetica (Venice, 1494. Fol. 181, n. 44) of Luca Pacioli (1445–1514). He presents the rule in a discussion regarding the estimation of the doubling time of an investment, but does not derive or explain the rule, and it is thus assumed that the rule predates Pacioli by some time.

A voler sapere ogni quantità a tanto per 100 l'anno, in quanti anni sarà tornata doppia tra utile e capitale, tieni per regola 72, a mente, il quale sempre partirai per l'interesse, e quello che ne viene, in tanti anni sarà raddoppiato. Esempio: Quando l'interesse è a 6 per 100 l'anno, dico che si parta 72 per 6; ne vien 12, e in 12 anni sarà raddoppiato il capitale. (emphasis added).

Roughly translated:

In wanting to know of any capital, at a given yearly percentage, in how many years it will double adding the interest to the capital, keep as a rule [the number] 72 in mind, which you will always divide by the interest, and what results, in that many years it will be doubled. Example: When the interest is 6 percent per year, I say that one divides 72 by 6; 12 results, and in 12 years the capital will be doubled.

Adjustments for higher accuracy Edit

For higher rates, a larger numerator would be better (e.g., for 20%, using 76 to get 3.8 years would be only about 0.002 off, where using 72 to get 3.6 would be about 0.2 off). This is because, as above, the rule of 72 is only an approximation that is accurate for interest rates from 6% to 10%.

For every three percentage points away from 8%, the value of 72 could be adjusted by 1:

 

or, for the same result:

 

Both of these equations simplify to:

 

Note that   is quite close to 69.3.

E-M rule Edit

The Eckart–McHale second-order rule (the E-M rule) provides a multiplicative correction for the rule of 69.3 that is very accurate for rates from 0% to 20%, whereas the rule is normally only accurate at the lowest end of interest rates, from 0% to about 5%.

To compute the E-M approximation, multiply the rule of 69.3 result by 200/(200−r) as follows:

 .

For example, if the interest rate is 18%, the rule of 69.3 gives t = 3.85 years, which the E-M rule multiplies by   (i.e. 200/ (200−18)) to give a doubling time of 4.23 years. As the actual doubling time at this rate is 4.19 years, the E-M rule thus gives a closer approximation than the rule of 72.

To obtain a similar correction for the rule of 70 or 72, one of the numerators can be set and the other adjusted to keep their product approximately the same. The E-M rule could thus be written also as

  or  

In these variants, the multiplicative correction becomes 1 respectively for r=2 and r=8, the values for which the rules of 70 and 72 are most accurate.

Padé approximant Edit

The third-order Padé approximant gives a more accurate answer over an even larger range of r, but it has a slightly more complicated formula:

 

which simplifies to:

 

Derivation Edit

Periodic compounding Edit

For periodic compounding, future value is given by:

 

where   is the present value,   is the number of time periods, and   stands for the interest rate per time period.

The future value is double the present value when:

 

which is the following condition:

 

This equation is easily solved for  :

 

A simple rearrangement shows:

 

If r is small, then ln(1 + r) approximately equals r (this is the first term in the Taylor series). That is, the latter factor grows slowly when   is close to zero.

Call this latter factor  . The function   is shown to be accurate in the approximation of   for a small, positive interest rate when   (see derivation below).  , and we therefore approximate time   as:

 

Written as a percentage:

 

This approximation increases in accuracy as the compounding of interest becomes continuous (see derivation below).   is   written as a percentage.

In order to derive the more precise adjustments presented above, it is noted that   is more closely approximated by   (using the second term in the Taylor series).   can then be further simplified by Taylor approximations:

 

Replacing the "R" in R/200 on the third line with 7.79 gives 72 on the numerator. This shows that the rule of 72 is most accurate for periodically compounded interests around 8%. Similarly, replacing the "R" in R/200 on the third line with 2.02 gives 70 on the numerator, showing the rule of 70 is most accurate for periodically compounded interests around 2%.

Alternatively, the E-M rule is obtained if the second-order Taylor approximation is used directly.

Continuous compounding Edit

For continuous compounding, the derivation is simpler and yields a more accurate rule:

 

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Donella Meadows, Thinking in Systems: A Primer, Chelsea Green Publishing, 2008, page 33 (box "Hint on reinforcing feedback loops and doubling time").
  2. ^ Slavin, Steve (1989). All the Math You'll Ever Need. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 153–154. ISBN 0-471-50636-2.
  3. ^ Kalid Azad Demystifying the Natural Logarithm (ln) from BetterExplained

External links Edit

  • The Scales Of 70 – extends the rule of 72 beyond fixed-rate growth to variable rate compound growth including positive and negative rates.

rule, confused, with, year, rule, finance, rule, rule, rule, methods, estimating, investment, doubling, time, rule, number, divided, interest, percentage, period, usually, years, obtain, approximate, number, periods, required, doubling, although, scientific, c. Not to be confused with 72 year rule In finance the rule of 72 the rule of 70 1 and the rule of 69 3 are methods for estimating an investment s doubling time The rule number e g 72 is divided by the interest percentage per period usually years to obtain the approximate number of periods required for doubling Although scientific calculators and spreadsheet programs have functions to find the accurate doubling time the rules are useful for mental calculations and when only a basic calculator is available 2 These rules apply to exponential growth and are therefore used for compound interest as opposed to simple interest calculations They can also be used for decay to obtain a halving time The choice of number is mostly a matter of preference 69 is more accurate for continuous compounding while 72 works well in common interest situations and is more easily divisible There are a number of variations to the rules that improve accuracy For periodic compounding the exact doubling time for an interest rate of r percent per period is t ln 2 ln 1 r 100 72 r displaystyle t frac ln 2 ln 1 r 100 approx frac 72 r where t is the number of periods required The formula above can be used for more than calculating the doubling time If one wants to know the tripling time for example replace the constant 2 in the numerator with 3 As another example if one wants to know the number of periods it takes for the initial value to rise by 50 replace the constant 2 with 1 5 Contents 1 Using the rule to estimate compounding periods 2 Choice of rule 3 History 4 Adjustments for higher accuracy 4 1 E M rule 4 2 Pade approximant 5 Derivation 5 1 Periodic compounding 5 2 Continuous compounding 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksUsing the rule to estimate compounding periods EditTo estimate the number of periods required to double an original investment divide the most convenient rule quantity by the expected growth rate expressed as a percentage For instance if you were to invest 100 with compounding interest at a rate of 9 per annum the rule of 72 gives 72 9 8 years required for the investment to be worth 200 an exact calculation gives ln 2 ln 1 0 09 8 0432 years Similarly to determine the time it takes for the value of money to halve at a given rate divide the rule quantity by that rate To determine the time for money s buying power to halve financiers divide the rule quantity by the inflation rate Thus at 3 5 inflation using the rule of 70 it should take approximately 70 3 5 20 years for the value of a unit of currency to halve 1 To estimate the impact of additional fees on financial policies e g mutual fund fees and expenses loading and expense charges on variable universal life insurance investment portfolios divide 72 by the fee For example if the Universal Life policy charges an annual 3 fee over and above the cost of the underlying investment fund then the total account value will be cut to 50 in 72 3 24 years and then to 25 of the value in 48 years compared to holding exactly the same investment outside the policy Choice of rule EditThe value 72 is a convenient choice of numerator since it has many small divisors 1 2 3 4 6 8 9 and 12 It provides a good approximation for annual compounding and for compounding at typical rates from 6 to 10 the approximations are less accurate at higher interest rates For continuous compounding 69 gives accurate results for any rate since ln 2 is about 69 3 see derivation below Since daily compounding is close enough to continuous compounding for most purposes 69 69 3 or 70 are better than 72 for daily compounding For lower annual rates than those above 69 3 would also be more accurate than 72 3 For higher annual rates 78 is more accurate nbsp Graphs comparing doubling times and half lives of exponential growths bold lines and decay faint lines and their 70 t and 72 t approximations In the SVG version hover over a graph to highlight it and its complement Rate Actual Years Rate Actual Years Rule of 72 Rule of 70 Rule of 69 3 72 adjusted E M rule0 25 277 605 69 401 288 000 280 000 277 200 277 667 277 5470 5 138 976 69 488 144 000 140 000 138 600 139 000 138 9471 69 661 69 661 72 000 70 000 69 300 69 667 69 6482 35 003 70 006 36 000 35 000 34 650 35 000 35 0003 23 450 70 349 24 000 23 333 23 100 23 444 23 4524 17 673 70 692 18 000 17 500 17 325 17 667 17 6795 14 207 71 033 14 400 14 000 13 860 14 200 14 2156 11 896 71 374 12 000 11 667 11 550 11 889 11 9077 10 245 71 713 10 286 10 000 9 900 10 238 10 2598 9 006 72 052 9 000 8 750 8 663 9 000 9 0239 8 043 72 389 8 000 7 778 7 700 8 037 8 06210 7 273 72 725 7 200 7 000 6 930 7 267 7 29511 6 642 73 061 6 545 6 364 6 300 6 636 6 66712 6 116 73 395 6 000 5 833 5 775 6 111 6 14415 4 959 74 392 4 800 4 667 4 620 4 956 4 99518 4 188 75 381 4 000 3 889 3 850 4 185 4 23120 3 802 76 036 3 600 3 500 3 465 3 800 3 85025 3 106 77 657 2 880 2 800 2 772 3 107 3 16830 2 642 79 258 2 400 2 333 2 310 2 644 2 71840 2 060 82 402 1 800 1 750 1 733 2 067 2 16650 1 710 85 476 1 440 1 400 1 386 1 720 1 84860 1 475 88 486 1 200 1 167 1 155 1 489 1 65070 1 306 91 439 1 029 1 000 0 990 1 324 1 523Note The most accurate value on each row is in italics and the most accurate of the simpler rules in bold History EditAn early reference to the rule is in the Summa de arithmetica Venice 1494 Fol 181 n 44 of Luca Pacioli 1445 1514 He presents the rule in a discussion regarding the estimation of the doubling time of an investment but does not derive or explain the rule and it is thus assumed that the rule predates Pacioli by some time A voler sapere ogni quantita a tanto per 100 l anno in quanti anni sara tornata doppia tra utile e capitale tieni per regola 72 a mente il quale sempre partirai per l interesse e quello che ne viene in tanti anni sara raddoppiato Esempio Quando l interesse e a 6 per 100 l anno dico che si parta 72 per 6 ne vien 12 e in 12 anni sara raddoppiato il capitale emphasis added Roughly translated In wanting to know of any capital at a given yearly percentage in how many years it will double adding the interest to the capital keep as a rule the number 72 in mind which you will always divide by the interest and what results in that many years it will be doubled Example When the interest is 6 percent per year I say that one divides 72 by 6 12 results and in 12 years the capital will be doubled Adjustments for higher accuracy EditFor higher rates a larger numerator would be better e g for 20 using 76 to get 3 8 years would be only about 0 002 off where using 72 to get 3 6 would be about 0 2 off This is because as above the rule of 72 is only an approximation that is accurate for interest rates from 6 to 10 For every three percentage points away from 8 the value of 72 could be adjusted by 1 t 72 r 8 3 r displaystyle t approx frac 72 r 8 3 r nbsp or for the same result t 70 r 2 3 r displaystyle t approx frac 70 r 2 3 r nbsp Both of these equations simplify to t 208 3 r 1 3 displaystyle t approx frac 208 3r frac 1 3 nbsp Note that 208 3 displaystyle frac 208 3 nbsp is quite close to 69 3 E M rule Edit The Eckart McHale second order rule the E M rule provides a multiplicative correction for the rule of 69 3 that is very accurate for rates from 0 to 20 whereas the rule is normally only accurate at the lowest end of interest rates from 0 to about 5 To compute the E M approximation multiply the rule of 69 3 result by 200 200 r as follows t 69 3 r 200 200 r displaystyle t approx frac 69 3 r times frac 200 200 r nbsp For example if the interest rate is 18 the rule of 69 3 gives t 3 85 years which the E M rule multiplies by 200 182 displaystyle frac 200 182 nbsp i e 200 200 18 to give a doubling time of 4 23 years As the actual doubling time at this rate is 4 19 years the E M rule thus gives a closer approximation than the rule of 72 To obtain a similar correction for the rule of 70 or 72 one of the numerators can be set and the other adjusted to keep their product approximately the same The E M rule could thus be written also as t 70 r 198 200 r displaystyle t approx frac 70 r times frac 198 200 r nbsp or t 72 r 192 200 r displaystyle t approx frac 72 r times frac 192 200 r nbsp In these variants the multiplicative correction becomes 1 respectively for r 2 and r 8 the values for which the rules of 70 and 72 are most accurate Pade approximant Edit The third order Pade approximant gives a more accurate answer over an even larger range of r but it has a slightly more complicated formula t 69 3 r 600 4 r 600 r displaystyle t approx frac 69 3 r times frac 600 4r 600 r nbsp which simplifies to t 207900 1386 r 3000 r 5 r 2 displaystyle t approx frac 207900 1386r 3000r 5r 2 nbsp Derivation EditPeriodic compounding Edit For periodic compounding future value is given by F V P V 1 r t displaystyle FV PV cdot 1 r t nbsp where P V displaystyle PV nbsp is the present value t displaystyle t nbsp is the number of time periods and r displaystyle r nbsp stands for the interest rate per time period The future value is double the present value when F V P V 2 displaystyle FV PV cdot 2 nbsp which is the following condition 1 r t 2 displaystyle 1 r t 2 nbsp This equation is easily solved for t displaystyle t nbsp ln 1 r t ln 2 t ln 1 r ln 2 t ln 2 ln 1 r displaystyle begin array ccc ln 1 r t amp amp ln 2 t ln 1 r amp amp ln 2 t amp amp frac ln 2 ln 1 r end array nbsp A simple rearrangement shows ln 2 ln 1 r ln 2 r r ln 1 r displaystyle frac ln 2 ln 1 r bigg frac ln 2 r bigg bigg frac r ln 1 r bigg nbsp If r is small then ln 1 r approximately equals r this is the first term in the Taylor series That is the latter factor grows slowly when r displaystyle r nbsp is close to zero Call this latter factor f r r ln 1 r displaystyle f r frac r ln 1 r nbsp The function f r displaystyle f r nbsp is shown to be accurate in the approximation of t displaystyle t nbsp for a small positive interest rate when r 08 displaystyle r 08 nbsp see derivation below f 08 1 03949 displaystyle f 08 approx 1 03949 nbsp and we therefore approximate time t displaystyle t nbsp as t ln 2 r f 08 72 r displaystyle t bigg frac ln 2 r bigg f 08 approx frac 72 r nbsp Written as a percentage 72 r 72 100 r displaystyle frac 72 r frac 72 100r nbsp This approximation increases in accuracy as the compounding of interest becomes continuous see derivation below 100 r displaystyle 100r nbsp is r displaystyle r nbsp written as a percentage In order to derive the more precise adjustments presented above it is noted that ln 1 r displaystyle ln 1 r nbsp is more closely approximated by r r 2 2 displaystyle r frac r 2 2 nbsp using the second term in the Taylor series 0 693 r r 2 2 displaystyle frac 0 693 r r 2 2 nbsp can then be further simplified by Taylor approximations 0 693 r r 2 2 69 3 R R 2 200 69 3 R 1 1 R 200 69 3 1 R 200 R 69 3 R 69 3 200 69 3 R 0 3465 displaystyle begin array ccc frac 0 693 r r 2 2 amp amp frac 69 3 R R 2 200 amp amp amp amp frac 69 3 R frac 1 1 R 200 amp amp amp approx amp frac 69 3 1 R 200 R amp amp amp amp frac 69 3 R frac 69 3 200 amp amp amp amp frac 69 3 R 0 3465 end array nbsp Replacing the R in R 200 on the third line with 7 79 gives 72 on the numerator This shows that the rule of 72 is most accurate for periodically compounded interests around 8 Similarly replacing the R in R 200 on the third line with 2 02 gives 70 on the numerator showing the rule of 70 is most accurate for periodically compounded interests around 2 Alternatively the E M rule is obtained if the second order Taylor approximation is used directly Continuous compounding Edit For continuous compounding the derivation is simpler and yields a more accurate rule e r p 2 e r p 2 ln e r p ln 2 r p ln 2 p ln 2 r p 0 693147 r displaystyle begin array ccc e r p amp amp 2 e rp amp amp 2 ln e rp amp amp ln 2 rp amp amp ln 2 p amp amp frac ln 2 r amp amp p amp approx amp frac 0 693147 r end array nbsp See also EditExponential growth Time value of money Interest Discount Rule of 16 Rule of three statistics References Edit a b Donella Meadows Thinking in Systems A Primer Chelsea Green Publishing 2008 page 33 box Hint on reinforcing feedback loops and doubling time Slavin Steve 1989 All the Math You ll Ever Need John Wiley amp Sons pp 153 154 ISBN 0 471 50636 2 Kalid Azad Demystifying the Natural Logarithm ln from BetterExplainedExternal links EditThe Scales Of 70 extends the rule of 72 beyond fixed rate growth to variable rate compound growth including positive and negative rates Portals nbsp Mathematics nbsp Business and economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rule of 72 amp oldid 1139551136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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