Compound Interest Rates
Let's re-state our previous example: if $1,000 is invested for a year at the interest rate of 10% per annum with annual compounding, you are going to receive at the end of the year a return of
Your investment earns $100 at the end of the year. The value of your investment at the end of the first year is $1,100. We can write the value of your investment as
If $1,000 is invested for two years at the interest rate of 10% per annum with annual compounding, you are going to receive at the end of the first year a return of
The value of your investment is
In the second year, you invest $1,100 at 10% for another year. The value of your investment would be
Or we can write as follows:
Now, if you invest $1,210 for the third year at 10%, the value of your investment would be
We can also write the above equation as
⇒
We can continue this way for years 4 and 5 with outcomes as follows:
In this case, your investment of $1,000 earns $610.51 at the end of five years. The value of your investment grows to $1,610.51 rather than $1,500.
In the above example, (1+0.10), (1+0.10)2, (1+0.10)3, (1+0.10)4, (1+0.10)5 show how $1 investment grows every year:
If you subtract $1 in each equation above, we get the effective interest rate:
The effective interest rate when the interest rate compounds annually,
Compare the above calculations with the simple interest rate, where interest rates do not compound. It remains 10% without compounding annually. When 10% compounds annually, the effective rate increases from 10% in the first year to 61.051% in the fifth year.
As you can see now that a $1,000 investment at a 10% continuously compounded interest rate can $610.51 as opposed to $500 with a simple interest rate.
Let's $$1,000 = M0, and (1+0.10)t = (1+r)t, then we can write, Future Value, FVt:
In other words, the future value of $1 can be written as (1+r)t, which is the compound factor.
Let's now consider one year:
- When we compound r semi-annually in one year the amount $1 grows to
- When we compound r quarterly in one year the amount $1 grows to
- When we compound r monthly in one year the amount $1 grows to
- When we compound r weekly in one year the amount $1 grows to
- When we compound r daily in one year the amount $1 grows to
Thus, in general, when we compound r m-times in one year the amount $1 grows to
Let's now consider t years:
When we compound r m-times in one year for t years the amount $1 grows to
Therefore, Future value:
Let's consider the following example:
(b) You are given: t = 3, m = 12, r = 8%, P0 = $5000, what is future value, M12?
(c) You are given: t = 3, m = 52, r = 8%, P0 = $5000, what is future value, M52?
Solution:
(a)
(b)
(c) You do it.