Compound Interest: Formula: A P (1+r/t) (NT)
Compound Interest: Formula: A P (1+r/t) (NT)
Compound Interest
This formula is often used to calculate the returns some investment has given . The main concept
in compound interest is that interest gets accumulated with the total principal amount and that
interest again earns interest over the years. Which makes it very powerful .
Formula : A = P * (1+r/t)^(nt)
Where
Example 1 :
Investment = Rs 10,000
return = 9%
investment period = 8 years
Example 2 :
Sensex returned 17.3% return over 29yrs since its inception in 1979 . What would be worth of Rs
10,000 invested that time .
You can see that a small amount has actually grown to 100 times .
2. CAGR
This tool is very important because it helps in comparing two differnt returns from two
investments , you can calculate how much an investment has returned per year on compounded
basis , Its just the opposite of Compound interest
A = Final amount
P = amount invested
n = Number of years
CAGR can be a great tool to compare two different investments and there returns .
Example :
A) CAGR = 41.42 %
B) CAGR = 34.59 %
3. Annuity
This formula is very very important one , in our daily life we come across many situation where
we do a fixed payment at the fixed interval , and we want to calculate the returns , but we dont
know how to do it .. Example can be
Or any investment at a fixed inteval over some years. In that case we calculate the Final value
using formula called Annuity .
Formula : A = P * [{(1+i)^n - 1 }/i] * (1+i) (if payment are being made at the start)
(it will be P * [{(1+i)^n - 1 }/i] if payments are made at the end of the year)
Where :
A = final amount
P = installment each time
n = total number of installments
i = interest rate for that tenure (example if yearly return is 24% , but payments are made
monthly then i = 24/12 = 2%)
Example 1 :
Robert invests 10,000 each month in a mutual fund for 10 years and the annual return was 18% ,
what will be his final corpus ?
A = 10,000 * [{(1+ .015)^120 - 1}/.015 ] * (1+ .015) => 40,39.241 (40 lacs)
Example 2 :
Vikas is planning his retirement , and planning to invest 5,000 per month in a Mutual fund for 20
yrs where he expects a return of 15% , then take out all the amount after 20 yrs and then put it in
a FD for 15 yrs which gives him 9.5% return .
A)
n = 240 and i = 1.25% (as the payment are monthly)
His money after 20 years = [5,000 * (1 + .0125)^240 - 1) / .0125] * ( 1.0125) = 75,80,000 (75
lacs)