You will have 1903.737 dollars in your account at the end of 13 years. The year wise end balance will be:
This is under the assumption that you don't deposit any fresh funds into your account and initial 700 dollars + the accumulated interest is all that is available in the account.
If compounded, interest = 81.244 and balance = 456.245 If not compounded, interest = 75 and balance = 450
No. If the account is earning interest the current amount should be greater than the initial deposit.
The question doesn't tell us the compounding interval ... i.e., how often theinterest is compounded. It does make a difference. Shorter intervals makethe account balance grow faster.We must assume that the interest is compounded annually ... once a year,at the end of the year.1,400 x (1.055)3 = 1,643.94 (rounded)at the end of the 3rd year.
12 percent, compounded monthly is the equivalent of an annual rate of approx 390%. At that rate, 1290 would be worth 5025.81 (approx).
$972.00From Superscot85: Above answer is for Simple Interest. You specifically stated "compound" so after 2 years balance will be 900 x (1.04)2 ie 973.44
If compounded, interest = 81.244 and balance = 456.245 If not compounded, interest = 75 and balance = 450
The interest on a business savings account is compounded daily using a 365-day year (366 days each leap year) and calculated on the collected balance.
No. If the account is earning interest the current amount should be greater than the initial deposit.
Compound interest is interest that is paid on both the original principal balance and interest earned. For example, a $100 savings account with a 5% rate of interest compounded annually would have a balance of $105 at the end of year one. At the end of year two the account would earn interest income on the entire account balance of $105 and the interest payment would amount to $5.25 at which point the saver would have an account balance of $110.25. The extra 25 cents of income in year two represents interest on the previous year's interest. Savings can be compounded on different dates including annual, monthly, daily, or continuously. The compounding date represents the date that the savings account balance is updated. The difference between daily or monthly compounding does not result in materially different account balances at the end of the compounding period. For example, a $10,000 savings account compounded at 5% monthly would be worth $44,677 at the end of 30 years compared to an account balance of $44,812 when compounded daily.
8 percent compounded quarterly is equivalent to approx 36% annually. At that rate, after 3 years the ending balance would be 1762.72 approx.
The interest on a business savings account is compounded daily using a 365-day year (366 days each leap year) and calculated on the collected balance.
The question doesn't tell us the compounding interval ... i.e., how often theinterest is compounded. It does make a difference. Shorter intervals makethe account balance grow faster.We must assume that the interest is compounded annually ... once a year,at the end of the year.1,400 x (1.055)3 = 1,643.94 (rounded)at the end of the 3rd year.
With compound interest - the balance after 7 years would be 26336.18
At the end of the first year, the balance in the account is: 5000(1+.0638). At the end of the second year, the balance in the account is: 5000(1+.0638)(1+.0638). At the end of the third year, the balance in the account is: 5000(1+.0638)(1+.0638)(1+.0638). At the end of the t year, the balance in the account is: 5000(1+.0638)^t. So, at the end of the tenth year, the balance in the account is 5000(1+.0638)^10 = 9,280.47. $5,000 is your principal, and the remaining ($9,280.47 - $5,000) = $4,280.47 is the interest.
12 percent, compounded monthly is the equivalent of an annual rate of approx 390%. At that rate, 1290 would be worth 5025.81 (approx).
The final amount is $1,647.01
Average Balance account