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Simple and Compound Interest

Simple interest is interest paid only on the principal amount. Compound interest is interest paid on the principal plus any interest already earned. For simple interest, the formula is I = PRT, where I is interest, P is principal, R is the annual interest rate, and T is time in years. For compound interest, the formula is B = P(1 + R/n)^nt, where B is the final balance, P is principal, R is the annual interest rate, n is the number of compounding periods per year, and t is time in years. More frequent compounding increases the final balance.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
367 views

Simple and Compound Interest

Simple interest is interest paid only on the principal amount. Compound interest is interest paid on the principal plus any interest already earned. For simple interest, the formula is I = PRT, where I is interest, P is principal, R is the annual interest rate, and T is time in years. For compound interest, the formula is B = P(1 + R/n)^nt, where B is the final balance, P is principal, R is the annual interest rate, n is the number of compounding periods per year, and t is time in years. More frequent compounding increases the final balance.
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7.

8 Simple and Compound Interest - Presentation Transcript


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Chapter 7, Section 8: Simple and Compound Interest January 15 th , 2009 Total Real Life Stuff
Warm Up:

Find 6% of $400.

Find 5% of $2,000.

Find 4.5% of $700.

Find 5.5% of $325.


$24 $100 $31.50 $17.88

3.

Simple Interest
When you first deposit money in a savings account, your deposit is called PRINCIPAL .

The bank takes the money and invests it.

In return, the bank pays you INTEREST based on the INTEREST RATE.

Simple interest is interest paid only on the PRINCIPAL.

4.

Simple Interest Formula

I = prt

I = interest

P = principal

R = the interest rate per year

T = the time in years .

5.

Real-World

Suppose you deposit $400 in a savings account. The interest rate is 5% per year.

Find the interest earned in 6 years. Find the total of principal plus interest.

FormulaI = P R T

P = 400 , R = 0.05 = 5% , T = 6 (in years)

400 x 0.05 = 20 = interest on one year

400 x 0.05 x 6 = 120 = interest on $400 over 6 years

400 + 120 = $520 = amount in account after 6 years.

6.

Now Figure Interest In Months

Remember that T = time in Years .

So, Find the interest earned in three months. Find the total of principal plus interest.

What fraction of a year is 3 months ?

T = 3/12 = or 0.25

I = PRT

I = 400 x 0.05 x 0.25

I = $5 = interest earned after 3 months

$5 + $400 = total amount in account

$405

7.

Try These: Both Find the Simple Interest

Principal = $250

Interest Rate = 4%

Time = 3 Years

Principal = $250

Interest Rate = 3.5%

Time = 6 Months
Reminder: Time is always in terms of Years. So, if youre dealing with months, you have to make your months a
fraction of a year. $30 $4.38

8.

Compound Interest
Compound Interest is when the bank pays interest on the Principal AND the Interest
already earned.

The Balance is the Principal PLUS the Interest.

The Balance becomes the Principal on which the bank figures the next interest payment
when doing Compound Interest.

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9.

Compound Interest Example


You deposit $400 in an account that earns 5% interest compounded annually (once per
year). What is the balance in your account after 4 years? In your last calculation, round to the nearest
cent.

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11.

Fill In This Chart $486.20 Year 4: Year 3: Year 2: Year 1: $400.00 Balance at End of Each Year Interest
(I = PRT) Principle @ Beginning of Year
Compound Interest Formula
You can find a balance using compound interest in one step with the compound interest

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formula.

An INTEREST PERIOD is the length of time over which interest is calculated.

The Interest Period can be a year or less than a year.

12.

Compound Interest Formula

B = p(1 + r) n

B = the final balance

P = is the principal

R = the interest rate for each interest period

N = the number of interest periods.

13.

Semi-Annual
When interested is compounded semiannually (twice per year), you must DIVIDE the
interest rate by the number of interest periods, which is 2.

6% annual interest rate 2 interest periods = 3% semiannual interest rate To find the number of payment periods,
multiply the number of years by the number of interest periods per year.
14.

Example
Find the balance on a deposit of $1,000, earning 6% interest compounded semiannually

for 5 years.
The interest rate R for compounding semiannually is 0.06 2, or 0.03. The number of
payment periods N is 5 years x 2 interest periods per year, or 10.

Now plug it into the formula!

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15.

The Formula!

B = p (1 + R) n

B = $1,000 (1 + 0.03) 10

B = $1,000 (1.03) 10

B = $1,000 (1.34391638)

B = $1,343.92

Happy? Youll actually get to use a calculator for these =]

16.

Try These: Both


Find the balance for each account. Amount Deposited: $900, Annual Interest Rate: 2%,

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Time: 3 Years.

Compounding Annually

Compounding Semiannually
$955.09 $955.37

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