Title: Exponential Growth
1Exponential Growth
2Exponential Growth
- Discrete Compounding
- Suppose that you were going to invest 5000 in an
IRA earning interest at an annual rate of 5.5.
How much interest would you earn during the 1st
year? How much is in the account after 1 year?
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- Interest after 1 year
-
- Account value after 1 year
-
- What would happen during the 2nd year?
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- Interest made during the 2nd year
-
- Value of account after 2nd year
- What about for the 3rd year?
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- Interest made during 3rd year
- Value of the account after 3rd year
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- Summarizing our calculations
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- From our calculations, a 5,000 investment into
an account with an annual interest rate of 5.5
will have a value of F after t years according to
the formula
8Exponential Growth
- In general, P dollars invested at an annual rate
r, has a value of F dollars after t years
according to - Notice that the interest was paid on a yearly
basis, while our money remained in the account.
This is called compounding annually or one time
per year.
9Exponential Growth
- What would happen if the interest was paid more
times during the year? - Suppose interest is collected at the end of each
quarter, (interest is paid four times each year).
What would happen to our investment?
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- Since the annual interest rate is 5.5 this rate
needs to be adjusted so that interest is paid on
a quarterly basis. The quarterly rate is
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- Interest made during 1st quarter
- Value of account after 1st quarter
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- Interest made during the 2nd quarter
- Value of account after 2nd quarter
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- Interest made during the 3rd quarter
- Account value after 3rd quarter
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- Interest made during the 4th quarter
- Account value after 4th quarter
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- Summarizing our results for 1 year
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- Notice that the exponent corresponds to the
number of quarters in a year - So for 1 year there are 4 quarters
- So for 2 years there are 8 quarters
- So for 3 years there are 12 quarters
- So for 4 years there are 16 quarters
- So for t years there are 4t quarters
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- So the value of a 5,000 investment with an
annual interest rate of 5.5 compounded quarterly
after t years is given by
18Exponential Growth
- In general, P dollars invested at an annual rate
r, compounded n times per year, has a value of F
dollars after t years according to
19Exponential Growth
- From the last slide, we can also say
- In other words, we can find the present value (P)
by knowing the future value (F).
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- Notice for each of the 3 years the account that
is compounded quarterly is worth more than the
one compounded annually
n1 n4
t F F
1 5,275.00 5,280.72
2 5,565.13 5,577.21
3 5,871.21 5,890.34
21Exponential Growth
- It would seem the larger n is the more an
investment is worth, but consider
n52 n365
t F F
1 5,282.55 5,282.68
2 5,581.07 5,581.34
3 5,896.45 5,896.89
22Exponential Growth
- Notice value of the investment is leveling off
when P, r, and t are fixed, but n is allowed to
get really big. - This suggests that is leveling off to some
special number
23Exponential Growth
- There is a clever technique that allows us to
find this value. We let m n/r, so that n
m?r. For any value of r, m gets larger as n
increases. We rewrite the expression
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25Exponential Growth
- So as m gets large,
- This is for continuous compounding
- In Excel, use the function EXP(x)
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- So P dollars will grow to F dollars after t years
compounded continuously at r by the equation - We can also find P by knowing F as follows
27Exponential Growth
- How do we compare investments with different
interest rates and different frequencies of
compounding? - Look at the values of P dollars at the end of one
year - Compute annual rates that would produce these
amounts without compounding. - Annual rates represent the effective annual yield
28Exponential Growth
- In our current example when we compounded
quarterly, after one year we had - Notice we gained 280.72 on interest after a
year. That interest represents a gain of 5.61
on 5000
Effective Annual Yield (y)
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- Effective annual yield (Discrete)
- find the difference between our money after one
year and our initial investment and divide by the
initial investment. - Therefore, interest at an annual rate r,
compounded n times per year has yield y
30Exponential Growth
- You may need to find the annual rate that would
produce a given yield. - Need to solve for r
This tells you the annual interest rate r that
will produce a given yield when compounding n
times a year. Note This is only for Discrete
Compounding
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- Effective Annual Yield (Continuous)
- Annual interest rate
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- Ex. Find the final amount if 10,000 is invested
with interest calculated monthly at 4.7 for 6
years. - Soln.
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- Ex. Find the annual yield on an investment that
computes interest at 4.7 compounded monthly. - Soln.
-
- About 4.80
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- Ex. Find the rate, compounded weekly, that has a
yield of 9.1 - Soln.
- About 8.72
35Exponential Growth
- Examples that use the word continuous to describe
compounding period mean you use - Ex. How much would you have after 3 years if an
investment of 15,000 was placed into an account
that earned 10.3 interest compounded
continuously?
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- Ex. Find the annual rate of an investment that
has an annual yield of 9 when compounded
continuously. - Soln.
-
- Approx 8.62
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- Where else can compound interest be used?
- Financing a home
- Financing a car
- Anything where you make monthly payments (with
interest) on money borrowed
39Exponential Growth
- The average cost of a home in Tucson is roughly
around 225,000. Suppose you were planning to
put down 25,000 now and finance the rest on a 30
year mortgage at 7 compounded monthly. How much
would your monthly payments be?
40Exponential Growth
- For a 30 year mortgage, youll be making 360
monthly payments. - At the end of the 360 months we want the present
value (P) of all the monthly payments to add up
to the amount you plan to finance, e.g. 200,000 - The 200,000 is called the principal
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- Lets say that Pk represents the present monthly
value k months ago. - Then after 360 months, we want
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- Since were borrowing money here, each Pk can be
expressed as - But where F represents the future value for Pk.
In other words, F is your monthly payment.
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- Remember we want
- So if we insert
- We have instead
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- Now for a little algebra (factor out F)
- Divide both sides by the stuff in
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- The last result will tell us our monthly payment
F - Notice that all we need to is figure out how to
add up the numbers in the bottom. This is where
we use Excel.
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- Since were compounding monthly at 7, r 0.07
and n 12 - So
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- Well do the rest of our calculation in Excel
- So our monthly payments F
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- Now that we know what F is we can figure out what
each Pk is. - Again, each Pk will tell us what F dollars was
worth k months ago - Well again use Excel to answer this question.
49Exponential Growth
End
This number tells us that our monthly payment of
1330.60 was worth 1322.89 one month ago.
Notice that as we descend down the table the
values get smaller because were going farther
back in time.
This number tells us how much of the monthly
payment is for interest. Notice that as we
descend the table the interest goes up. This
tells us that in the beginning of a payment plan
a lot of the monthly payment is toward interest
and only a small portion is going toward
principal while the reverse is true at the end.
Start
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- What your outstanding balance looks like with
each monthly payment?
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- Things to notice
- After 360 months of payments of 1330.61, youre
really paying 479,019.60 on 200,000 borrowed. - The mortgage company has made 139 profit on your
borrowing 200,000.