Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What’s the Use of It? The Math of Money.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What’s the Use of It? The Math of Money."— Presentation transcript:

1 What’s the Use of It? The Math of Money

2 Table of Contents Objectives Competences Simple Interest
Compound Interest Compound vs Simple Interest Continuous compounding Installment Buying Annual Percentage Rate ( APR) Loans in Daily Life Bibliography/Sources

3 Learning Objectives “ A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart.” Jonathan Swift Understand the concept of the time value of the money Calculate the amount of simple and compound interest Recognize the difference between simple and compound interest Compare different offers, both loan and credit card Apply these skills and concepts to real-world financial situations

4 Competences “There are people who have money and people who are rich
Competences “There are people who have money and people who are rich.” Coco Chanel Recognize and solve routine problems readily and find ways to reach a solution or goal where no routine path is apparent Make precise calculations and check the validity of the results in the context of the problem Formulate questions, conjectures, definitions, and generalizations about data, information, and problem situations Be aware of the usefulness of mathematics, also be able to bridge the concrete and the abstract and enable deeper understanding of important ideas

5 loan Simple Interest Compound Interest Installment Buying
Loans in Daily Life

6 What is an Interest and how does it work?
Interest is the “rent” that a borrower pays a lender to use the lender’s money.

7 There are basically TWO types of Interest. They are: Simple Interest
“Money makes money, and the money that money makes, makes more money.” Benjamin Franklin There are basically TWO types of Interest. They are: Simple Interest Compound Interest

8 Simple Interest I = Prt ; A = P+I = P(1 + rt)
where I = amount of interest P = present value (called "Principal") r = interest rate t = time (in years) A = future value

9 Check your understanding
1) € 3000 earning Simple Interest at 6% per year for 2 years Total Simple Interest = € 3000 x 0.06 x 2 = € 360 Interest So at the end of two years we get: € € 360 = € 3360

10 Check your understanding
2) How much would you need to have on an account to earn € 100 simple interest in four months, assuming that the simple interest rate is 6.4 %? I = Prt 100= P∙0.064∙(4/12) P= €

11 Remember… Simple interest is a type of interest that is paid only on the original amount deposit and not on past interest paid.

12 Want to Be a Millionaire? You Can!
If you leave your money to grow for a long time, € 100 can turn into a million euros. No, seriously. How? Through compounding.

13 Compound Interest Compounding interest is "interest on interest." It is a method of calculating interest where the interest is added to the original principal. This new value is now our principal for the next time period. In this method the interest earned in past terms can earn interest in future terms.

14

15 Compound Interest Formula

16 Compound vs Simple Interest

17 INTEREST ing Comparison :
P=€ 1000; r=7% Period/years Simple Interest Compound Interest 1.000,00 1 1.070,00 2 1.140,00 1.144,90 3 1.210,00 1.225,04 4 1.280,00 1.310,80 5 1.350,00 1.402,55 6 1.420,00 1.500,73 7 1.490,00 1.605,78

18 P= € 1000; r =7% Period/years Simple Interest Compound Interest 23
2.610,00 4.740,53 24 2.680,00 5.072,37 25 2.750,00 5.427,43 26 2.820,00 5.807,35 27 2.890,00 6.213,87 28 2.960,00 6.648,84 29 3.030,00 7.114,26 30 3.100,00 7.612,26

19 Simple and Compound Interest Graph

20 So, after this research, Would you rather earn compound or simple interest? Would you rather pay compound

21 Time is on Your Side The longer you save, the greater the
effect of compound interest. But also… The longer you borrow, the quicker your debts grow.

22 Compounding Periods When calculating compound interest, the number of calculating periods makes a significant difference. The basic rule is that the higher the number of calculating periods, the greater the amount of compound interest.

23 A bank may pay interest as follows:
Semi-annually: twice a year or every 180 days Quarterly: 4 times a year or every 90 days Monthly: 12 times a year or every 30 days Daily: times a year

24 Check your understanding
3) Find the future value of € 1000 invested for 10 years at 7% interest : compounded annually compounded semi-annually compounded quarterly compounded daily

25 Solution Identify the variables: P= € 1000, r = 0.07, t = 10 n =1 ;

26 Continuous compounding
An interest is constantly computed  and added to the balance of an account , leading to an infinite amount of compounding periods. A  final amount P  principal or original amount r  rate of interest per year t  time, in years

27 Keep in mind… Any discussion of compound interest is
incomplete without a discussion on inflation. The inflation rates can vary tremendously but in all our examples we will ignore it.

28 Installment Buying An installment usually refers to either:
a sum of money paid in small parts in a fixed period of time. a single payment within a staged payment plan of a loan or a  hire purchase (installment plan)

29 The simplest method for calculating
Add-On Interest The simplest method for calculating interests is called Add-On Interest: It is nothing more than an application of the simple interest formula.

30 Installment Loan Formulas
AMOUNT OF INTEREST: AMOUNT TO BE REPAID: NUMBER OF PAYMENTS: AMOUNT OF EACH PAYMENT: I = Prt A = P+I = P(1 + rt) N = 12t m =

31 Check your understanding
4) Say, you are interested in buying a new car, and need to come up with € ,00 in financing. The dealership offers you an installment plan with an add-on interest rate of 3.5% over 5 years. What, then, will be the size of your monthly payments?

32 Solution Identify the variables: P= € ,00; r = 0.035, t = 5 years The total number of payment periods is: The total amount to be paid back to the dealer will be: Thus, the amount of each monthly payment is: N = (2 per year)∙(5 years)= 60 A = P+I = P(1 + rt) = € ,00∙( ∙5)= € ,00 m =

33 But… In the add-on interest method you are not keeping the entire borrowed amount for the entire time of the loan period, which makes us wonder if the annual interest rate that we were told is actually correct. So, in reality the true interest rate of the loan is called the Annual Percentage Rate or APR .

34 APR Formula to approximate the Annual Percentage Rate for an add-on interest loan is where, r – annual interest rate N – total number of payments

35 Why Use APR? Loans can be confusing. Lenders quote a lot of different
numbers that mean different things. They might include certain costs that you are likely to pay, or they might conveniently omit those costs in advertisements and brochures. You might even get completely transparent quotes from different lenders, but be unsure which one is less expensive (because the interest rates and closing costs are different). APR helps you (more or less) get comparison of loans by accounting for all of the costs related to borrowing.

36 Comparison In Example 4, we considered the purchase of a car with a price of € ,00, paid in installments for over 5 years at an add-on rate of 3.5%. What is the APR? The APR is 6.89%. This is almost twice as much as the add-on rate!

37 Suppose… the principal amount of a loan is € 200,
the interest rate is 5%, transaction costs and fees are € 6. In this scenario : The amount of money borrowed is effectively only € 194 (€ € 6 in fees). At the end of one year, the interest paid will be € 10 (5% of € 200) This interest payment of € 10 is 5.155% of € 194. Therefore, the effective rate that you pay (Annual Percentage Rate, or APR) is 5.155%, even though the nominal interest rate is 5%. This is exactly what happens in a mortgage.

38 Open-End Credit or A Credit Card Loan
This type of loan allows purchase or cash advances up to a specified maximum line of a credit and has a flexible repayment schedule. But, be careful!

39 Loans in Daily Life

40 Bibliography/Sources
Books: Erceg, Metode gospodarskog računa, Element, 2009. Rockswold, Gary K. , Algebra and Trigonometry, Pearson Education , Edition. Web site:

41 At the end… Have a nice day!


Download ppt "What’s the Use of It? The Math of Money."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google