ARGH! Need maths help!
Mar. 8th, 2010 08:01 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I was once good at maths.
I know I should know how to do this, but I cannot remember enough to see if my method is effective or not. I found a website that will let me punch in numbers and give me an answer, but I want to check it! So I am hoping that
shocolate or someone similarly gifted is up and about.
I start with $50. Every week, I add $50. I have a compounding interest rate of 9.96%. I compound it annually, or monthly (two results). What do I have at the end of 21 years?
More than happy to do all the actual working if someone can remind me of what the formulae are.
I know I should know how to do this, but I cannot remember enough to see if my method is effective or not. I found a website that will let me punch in numbers and give me an answer, but I want to check it! So I am hoping that
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I start with $50. Every week, I add $50. I have a compounding interest rate of 9.96%. I compound it annually, or monthly (two results). What do I have at the end of 21 years?
More than happy to do all the actual working if someone can remind me of what the formulae are.
Interest
Date: 2010-03-08 09:45 am (UTC)Note that IME most savings accounts are actual daily compounding, with interest credited 1-4 times a year, rather than only compounding once or twice a year. But given your hypothetical interest rate (9.96%! does anyone pay even half that these days?!) perhaps you have a hypothetical account too that really does only compound once or twice a year.
My brute force perl script suggests that with weekly compounding (irrespective of when it's credited), you'd have over $185,000 at the end (with exactly how much depending a bit on the details of leap years you happen to cross, and hence number of weeks involved). This calculator suggests you'd have a bit over $174,000 if the interest were only compounded annually (alas it doesn't have a biannual compounding option, only daily/monthly/quarterly, but the figure ought to be somewhere in between those two values -- or more precisely between the quarterly and yearly figures).
I hope that helps,
Ewen
PS: Of those amounts about $55,000 is weekly cash contributions and the rest is interest. (1.0996)^21 is nearly 7.5 (so approx 7500%), but obviously not all of the cash is there at the start to get interest, so figures in the $170,000-$185,000 range are quite believable.
Re: Interest
Date: 2010-03-08 09:54 am (UTC)Ewen
Re: Interest
Date: 2010-03-08 10:02 am (UTC)The last time I did anything like this, I proved that you would have been about $10 billion richer if you followed one particular financial adviser for 30 years. Of course, he was the little columnist who turned up for work on the train and wore a nice hat but old jacket, because he could only be happy investing in things he didn't know anyone on the board of ...