字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 >> This is YourMathGal, Julie Harland. Please visit my website at yourmathgal.com where all of my videos were organized by topic. We're going to do the following three problems on this video. They all involved in investment of 20,000 dollars and a 12 percent interest account and we're trying to find out how much many there is in the account after 20 years, but the conditions are different. The first one is just if it's in the simple interest account, the second problem is if it's compounded yearly so we'll be using the compound interest formula, and the third one will be if it's compounded daily also using the compound interest formula. So, here's the first problem. You're investing 20,000 at 12 percent for 20 years. So, you've got this formula, I equals PRT so the principal is 20,000, the rate is 12 percent which you could write as 12/100 or 0.12 and the time is 20 years. So, we simply put that in the formula, I equals 20,000 times and I'm going to do it as 12/100 so if I can do this in my head just as well times 20. So, I can cancel that hundred with two of those zeros and what does that give me in interest? Well, I have 200 dollars, right, times 12 times 20, so I'm just going to do 2 times 2 is 4 times 12 that's 48, and then how many zeros do I have here, 1, 2, 3 zeros, so that's what you make an interest, pretty amazing isn't it? In other words, way more than you're original investment. Now, how much money is in the account? It says, how much money is in the account, that's a different question. So, I have my 20,000 dollars then I get to add on to that. That's was already in the account to begin with and so my answer is 68,000 dollars. So if you-- now if you got an extra 20,000 dollars around which I don't, but if you do and you just let it sit in an account earning simple interest, that's how much money would be in the account after 20 years, of course, 20 years is a long time to wait. So, we're going to remember this. We're going to compare all these later. Let's go on to the next problem. So, if 20,000 is invested in an account earning 12 percent interest compounded yearly, how much money is in the account after 20 years? We need this formula. This is the compound interest formula and remember, these are what these variables stand for in the compound interest formula. All right, so my principal here is 20,000 and my rate is still 12 percent or 0.12 or 12/100. My variable N, okay that's how often-- how many times per year it's compounded. Well, it's only yearly, so N is just one in this case, once a year, and the time is in years, it's 20 years. So, T equals 20. So, if we put that in this formula, we've got 20,000 times 1 plus, now what's the rate, 0.12 over 1 times N times T, 1 times 20. That's the exponent, so I've got 20,000 times, all right, what's this going to be? Well, 0.12 by 1 is just 0.12 and 1 plus that is 1.12 to the 20th. So, of course if you have a lot of time, you could take 1.12 and multiply it, finds itself 20 times to get the answer, that I'm going to suggest, you put that on your calculator and there's different calculators on how you're going to enter this, so go ahead and try it. I showed how I did it in my calculator and I'm going to just show the series of keystrokes I use. So, these are the keystrokes I use on my calculator now that's because I'm doing the order of operation myself. I'm just thinking well, in order of operations, I first have to do 1.12 and raise it to the power, that's what this is, 1.12 and I use the Y to the X key or you might have a little caret, this is called a caret, and then the number for the exponent would be 20 then I put equals and there will be a number that comes up and then I'll use the multiplication. I'm going to take that answer and multiply it by 20,000 dollars and then I'm going to put equal sign and when I do that, I get this number rounded to the nearest cent, 192,925.86 cents, okay that is a huge difference than when we did the simple interest formula, I'm going to remind you, this is how much money is in the account after 20 years. So, you put in 20,000, you let it sit there for 20 years, you've got a 192,925 dollars in your account, simple interest you'd only had 68,000. It's really amazing. So, compounding interest is great if you're putting money an account and you want to earn a lot of interest. But if you're borrowing many, you're hoping somebody is going to give it to you as simple interest because you would pay a lot less. Now, let's see what would happen if we actually compounded it daily instead of yearly. How much more of a difference could that be and most banks do compound daily. All right, so here's the next part. What about if you invested it and you compounded it daily? So, we're going to have the same variables here. At the beginning, you've got the principal is still 20,000, right? And the rate is still 12%, but N is different. How many times per year is that if it's done daily. And I know that we don't have the same number of days per year, but usually its 365 and that's what for years. So N is 365 and then for how many years, 20. So, the only thing different from the previous problem is that N is 365 as opposed to 1. So, we're going to plug those numbers in, A equals 20,000 times 1 plus 0.12, right? That's the rate over, right now, what was the N in this case, 365 and then you're going to raise that to the N times T, so, 365 times 20. [ Pause ] Now again, the trick is entering this. You could, you know, enter it just like it-- you see it right here if you've got a calculator that allow-- I would say if you had a graphing calculator and for sure can make-- make sure you enter everything correctly. I tend to like to simplify it just a little bit and there is an easy way to always simplify this, that's inside the parenthesis, because whatever this denominator is, 365, you just think of-- that would be the whole number, the number 1 over here, I could rewrite that always as this number over itself, 365 over 365 right, which means this ends up being the whole number part in front of the 12 and that ends up being the denominator. So, imagine if you change that to 365 over 365 then you'd a common denominator and you'd have 365 plus 0.12. So, I do that and then I also do the 365 times 20, but it's unnecessary. You could leave it like this and use parenthesis and, you know, work it in your calculator however you like. So, I'm going to do just a little bit of simplification before I put it in the calculator, and so like I said, this will be 365.12 over 365 so, it's a-- and so I'm going to do-- I'm not going to actually do that division. I'm going to enter it just like that in my calculator and then 365 times 20, let's see what is that, that's 7,300, all right. So, again, you could just enter it like it is at this point or at that point and my keystrokes again, I'm going to start with what's in the parenthesis here so I'm actually going to use a parenthesis. So, I would do 365.12 divided by 365 first and then I would raised it so you'd use the Y to the X button or the little caret to the 7,300 and then you would equal and then you would times up by 20,000. So, again here are my keystrokes. So, these are my keystrokes down here. I do what's in parenthesis, 365.12 divided by 365, I write what that equals then I'm going to raise that to the 7,300. So, on my calculator, that's the Y to the X button, 7,300 then I'm going to say what that equal so far and I'm going to multiply that answer by 20,000 and write equals. And when you do that, this is the number you should get. You see, I got 220, 376 dollars and 58 cents so that's how much many she gets an account and I didn't double check this. I probably will do that but I always suggest you enter your numbers more than once. Okay, so now let's compare this 3. All right, here are our results if we invest 20,000 dollars at 12% for 20 years, you can see the amount of the account at the end of the 20 years if you simply use simple interest. You'd only have 68,000 dollars in the account. If you compounded interest yearly, you would have a 192,925 huge difference and if you compounded daily, you have more but it's not as huge of a difference 220,376 dollars still I'll take 28,000 dollars more approximately, that would be fine and I prefer the compounded daily. The reason that com-- when you compound interest by so much more money is your getting interest on your interest and it just grows very quickly. Now of course if this was 6 percent instead of 12 percent it wouldn't be as much of a difference. Of course the higher percentage is going to make the bigger difference, but it's compounding it or not that makes a very big difference. So, I think that's a pretty interesting to think about, especially if you're borrowing on your credit cards and it's being compounded like crazy and you have a high percentage rate. So, think about that. This is YourMathGal, Julie Harland. Please visit my website at yourmathgal.com where all of my videos were organized by topic.