What is the compound interest on ₱ 30000.00 at 5% per annum for 2 years compounded annually

Compounding and Your Return Calculator

How interest is calculated can greatly affect your savings. The more often interest is compounded, or added to your account, the more you earn. This calculator demonstrates how compounding can affect your savings, and how interest on your interest really adds up!



Information and interactive calculators are made available to you as self-help tools for your independent use and are not intended to provide investment advice. We cannot and do not guarantee their applicability or accuracy in regards to your individual circumstances. All examples are hypothetical and are for illustrative purposes. We encourage you to seek personalized advice from qualified professionals regarding all personal finance issues.

The sooner you start to save, the more you'll earn with compound interest.

How compound interest works

Compound interest is the interest you get on:

  • the money you initially deposited, called the principal
  • the interest you've already earned

For example, if you have a savings account, you'll earn interest on your initial savings and on the interest you've already earned. You get interest on your interest.

This is different to simple interest. Simple interest is paid only on the principal at the end of the period. A term deposit usually earns simple interest.

Save more with compound interest

The power of compounding helps you to save more money. The longer you save, the more interest you earn. So start as soon as you can and save regularly. You'll earn a lot more than if you try to catch up later.

For example, if you put $10,000 into a savings account with 3% interest compounded monthly:

  • After five years, you'd have $11,616. You'd earn $1,616 in interest.
  • After 10 years you'd have $13,494. You'd earn $3,494 in interest.
  • After 20 years you'd have $18,208. You'd earn $8,208 in interest.

Compound interest formula

To calculate compound interest, use the formula:

A = P x (1 + r)n

A = ending balance
P = starting balance (or principal)
r = interest rate per period as a decimal (for example, 2% becomes 0.02)
n = the number of time periods

How to calculate compound interest

To calculate how much $2,000 will earn over two years at an interest rate of 5% per year, compounded monthly:

1. Divide the annual interest rate of 5% by 12 (as interest compounds monthly) = 0.0042

2. Calculate the number of time periods (n) in months you'll be earning interest for (2 years x 12 months per year) = 24

3. Use the compound interest formula

A = $2,000 x (1+ 0.0042)24
A = $2,000 x 1.106
A = $2,211.64

What is the compound interest on ₱ 30000.00 at 5% per annum for 2 years compounded annually

Lorenzo and Sophia compare the compounding effect

Lorenzo and Sophia both decide to invest $10,000 at a 5% interest rate for five years. Sophia earns interest monthly, and Lorenzo earns interest at the end of the five-year term.

After five years:

  • Sophia has $12,834.
  • Lorenzo has $12,500.

Sophia and Lorenzo both started with the same amount. But Sophia gets $334 more interest than Lorenzo because of the compounding effect. Because Sophia is paid interest each month, the following month she earns interest on interest.

Compound interest is when interest is earned not only on the initial amount invested, but also on any interest. In other words, interest is earned on top of interest and thus “compounds”. The compound interest formula can be used to calculate the value of such an investment after a given amount of time, or to calculate things like the doubling time of an investment. We will see examples of this below.

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Examples of finding the future value with the compound interest formula

First, we will look at the simplest case where we are using the compound interest formula to calculate the value of an investment after some set amount of time. This is called the future value of the investment and is calculated with the following formula.

What is the compound interest on ₱ 30000.00 at 5% per annum for 2 years compounded annually

Example

An investment earns 3% compounded monthly. Find the value of an initial investment of $5,000 after 6 years.

Solution

Determine what values are given and what values you need to find.

  • Earns 3% compounded monthly: the rate is \(r = 0.03\) and the number of times compounded each year is \(m = 12\)
  • Initial investment of $5,000: the initial amount is the principal, \(P = 5000\)
  • 6 years: \(t = 6\)

You are trying to find \(A\), the future value (the value after 6 years). Now apply the formula with the known values:

\(\begin{align}A &= P\left(1 + \dfrac{r}{m}\right)^{mt} \\ &= 5000\left(1 + \dfrac{0.03}{12}\right)^{12 \times 6} \\ &\approx \bbox[border: 1px solid black; padding: 2px]{5984.74}\end{align}\)

Answer: The value after 6 years will be $5,984.74.

Important! Be careful about rounding within the formula. You should do as much work as possible in your calculator and not round until the very end. Otherwise your answer may be off by a few dollars.

Let’s try one more example like this before we try some more difficult types of problems.

Example

What is the value of an investment of $3,500 after 2 years if it earns 1.5% compounded quarterly?

Solution

As before, we are finding the future value, A. In this example, we are given:

  • Value after 2 years: \(t = 2\)
  • Earns 3% compounded quarterly: \(r = 0.015\) and \(m = 4\) since compounded quarterly means 4 times a year
  • Principal: \(P = 3500\)

Applying the formula:

\(\begin{align}A &= P\left(1 + \dfrac{r}{m}\right)^{mt} \\ &= 3500\left(1 + \dfrac{0.015}{4}\right)^{4 \times 2}\\ &\approx \bbox[border: 1px solid black; padding: 2px]{3606.39}\end{align}\)

Answer: The value after 2 years will be $3,606.39.

There are other types of questions that can be answered using the compound interest formula. Most of these require some algebra, and the level of algebra required depends on which variable you need to solve for. We will look at some different possibilities below.

Example of finding the rate given other values

Suppose you were given the future value, the time, and the number of compounding periods, but you were asked to calculate the rate earned. This could be used in a situation where you are taking the amount of home sold for and determining the rate earned, if it is viewed as an investment. Consider the following example.

Example

Mrs. Jefferson purchased an antique statue for $450. Ten years later, she sold this statue for $750. If the statue is viewed as an investment, what annual rate did she earn?

Solution

If we view this as an investment of \(P = $450\), then we know that the future value is \(A = $750\). This was after \(t = 10\) years. Finally, if we assume an annual rate, we will use \(m = 1\) and have:

\(A = P\left(1 + \dfrac{r}{m}\right)^{mt}\)

\(750 = 450\left(1 + \dfrac{r}{1}\right)^{1 \times 10}\)

This is the same as:

\(750 = 450\left(1 + r\right)^{10}\)

We are solving for the rate, \(r\). We will do this using the following steps.

Divide both sides by 450.

\(\dfrac{750}{450} = \left(1 + r\right)^{10}\)

Simplify on the left-hand side. But, we need to be careful about rounding, so we will keep the fraction for now.

\(\dfrac{5}{3} = \left(1 + r\right)^{10}\)

Take the left-hand side to the 1/10th power to clear the power of 10 on the right.

\(\left(\dfrac{5}{3}\right)^{\dfrac{1}{10}} = 1 + r\)

Calculate the value on the left and solve for \(r\).

\(\begin{align}1.0524 &= 1 + r \\1.0524 – 1 &= r \\ \bbox[border: 1px solid black; padding: 2px]
{0.0524} &= r\end{align}\)

Therefore, Mrs. Jefferson earned an annual rate of 5.24%. Not bad! But there was definitely some more complicated algebra involved. In some cases, you may even have to make use of logarithms. A common situation where you might see this is when calculating the doubling time of an investment at a given rate.

Calculating the doubling time of an investment using the compound interest formula

Regardless of the amount initially invested, you can find the doubling time of an investment as long as you are given the rate and the number of compounding periods. Let’s look at an example and see how this could be done.

Example

How many years will it take for an investment to double in value if it earns 5% compounded annually?

It may seem tough to decide where to start here, as we are only given the rate, \(r = 0.05\), and the number of compounding periods, \(m = 1\). Note that we are trying to find the time, \(t\).

Since we do not know the initial investment, we can simply call it \(P\). For this to double, its value would be \(2P\) and, using the compound interest formula, we would have:

\(A = P\left(1 + \dfrac{r}{m}\right)^{mt}\)

\(2P = P\left(1 + \dfrac{0.05}{1}\right)^{t}\)

This could be written as:

\(2P = P\left(1.05\right)^{t}\)

Remember that this would only make sense if the amount invested is not zero, so we can divide both side by \(P\). This gives:

\(2 = \left(1.05\right)^{t}\)

To solve for t, we will take the natural log, ln, of both sides. By the laws of logarithms, this will allow us to bring the exponent to the front.

\(\ln(2) = t\ln\left(1.05\right)\)

Finally, we can divide and then use our calculators to find t.

\(\begin{align}t &= \dfrac{\ln(2)}{\ln\left(1.05\right)}\\ &\approx \bbox[border: 1px solid black; padding: 2px]{14.2 \text{ years}}\end{align}\)

Answer: It will take a little more than 14 years before the investment will double in value.

The same process could be used to determine when an investment would triple or even quadruple. You would just use a different multiple of \(P\) in the first part of the formula.

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Summary

The compound interest formula is used when an investment earns interest on the principal and the previously-earned interest. Investments like this grow quickly; how quickly depends on the rate and the number of compounding periods. When working with a compound interest formula question, always make note of what values are known and what values need to be found so that you stay organized with your work.

Now that you have studied compound interest, you should also review simple interest and how it is different.

What is the compound interest on ₱ 30000.00 at 5% per annum for 2 years compounded annually

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What is the compound interest on 3000 at 5% for 2 years compounded annually?

=307. 5Rs.

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Detailed Solution. ∴ The compound interest for 2 years is Rs. 1320.

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The answer is 1576.25!!