stressedadfff
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could you pleasee explain that i dont get itthe interest is applied monthly and the principal amount is paid off in 5 yearly instalments
The "charged monthly" is the rate at which interest in being charged. So since the rate is 15% p.a. 15% is the yearly rate. You need to divide by 12 to get the monthly rate you are being charged.i dont really get wha tit means by 'charged monthly' and then '5 annual isntallments?
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Do you have any answers?does anyone know which formula to use for c also?
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nevermind flat interest rate is just simple interest. So interest is being applied on 62500does anyone know which formula to use for c also?
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oh i see thanks! i just dont get how to solve it would it monthly or yearly.... tkrjlerjbdThe "charged monthly" is the rate at which interest in being charged. So since the rate is 15% p.a. 15% is the yearly rate. You need to divide by 12 to get the monthly rate you are being charged.
Annual meaning yearly. Note p.a is per annum meaning per a year.
Installment is referring to the payment of the loan.
So '5 annual installments' is basically saying make 5 payments to pay off the loan and the payment is made each year.
yep 18.8%?Do you have any answers?
1st question https://boredofstudies.org/threads/annoying-loan-reyament-questions.109719/yep 18.8%?
The important thing to recognise is:oh i see thanks! i just dont get how to solve it would it monthly or yearly.... tkrjlerjbd
i think what im confused about is some of the annuities go likeThe important thing to recognise is:
- if interest is charged at 12% pa, and compounded yearly, then interest will be charged once at 12%, so if you owe $A at the start of the year, the amount owing at the end of the year (before any payment is made) is
- if interest is charged at 12% pa, and compounded monthly, then interest will be charged at 1% but at the end of each month, and compounding, so if you owe $A at the start of the year, the amount owing at the end of the year (before any payment is made) is
Suppose I invest $1000 on 1 Jan each year, and it earns interest at 12% pa, compounded monthly. I start on 1 Jan 2022. How much will I have on 31 Dec 2030?i think what im confused about is some of the annuities go like
A1= P(r)^12
A2 = P(r)^11
how come the n is decreasing as the year is going on, im not sure when to use this type?
thank you thank you!!Suppose I invest $1000 on 1 Jan each year, and it earns interest at 12% pa, compounded monthly. I start on 1 Jan 2022. How much will I have on 31 Dec 2030?
Let $An be the amount the nth deposit grows to. So, $A1 is invested for all of 2022, 2023, 2024, ... and 2030, so for 9 years:
$A2 is invested on 1 Jan 2023 and so grows for all of 2023, 2024, 2025, ... and 2030, so for 8 years:
$A3 is invested on 1 Jan 2024 and so grows for all of 2024, 2025, 2026, ... and 2030, so for 7 years:
Continuing on until the investment on 1 Jan 2030, which grows for only 1 year. It is the 9th investment, and so is $A9:
So, on 31 Dec 2030, the amount that I will have is
Do you see that the powers decrease as each subsequent investment is compounding for a shorter period of time?
Many would approach this by defining $An as the total amount at the time the nth deposit is made, but this makes for a more complicated approach (in my opinion) as you can equally treat each investment as a single account that grows without interruption and a new account is set up for the next deposit. You can then simply add up the accounts to get the total investment.