Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMarshall Fields Modified over 9 years ago
1
ENTRANCE TICKET You take out a loan for $20,000 to finance your college education. In your research of loans and loan interest rates, you find that: Federal government offers you an interest rate of 4.6%. PNC Bank offers you an interest rate of 7.8%. If it takes you 10 years to pay off your loan, how much more will you pay if you take the PNC loan?
2
1.Federal government offers you an interest rate of 4.6%. Simple interest = P = r = t = I= (20,000)(.046)(10) I= $9200 2.PNC Bank offers you an interest rate of 7.8%. Simple Interest = P = r = t = I = (20,000)(.078)(10) I = $15,600 15,600 -9,200 $6,400 more
3
Agenda 1)Announcements 2)Go Over HW 3) Notes on Compound Interest 4) Practice Problems
4
Announcements Final PEETs due by 11/30/15 Wednesday’s lesson will be about Black Friday --- you are still responsible to complete the lesson if you do not have me on Wednesday (do it by 11/30/15)
5
Go Over HW Simple Interest Problems
6
Compound interest: interest is added back into the principal, thus earning more interest Compound (v) = to increase or add to Ex) Julio’s frustration with his class was compounded by his student’s poor quiz grades
7
SIMPLE INTEREST vs. COMPOUND INTEREST Simple interest makes $$ grow at a consistent rate Compound Interest makes $$ grow at an increasing rate
8
How do I calculate how much interest I earn/pay if interest is compounded? Compound Interest Formula: = P[(1 + r) t -1]Compound Interest Amount of $$ earn/pay at the end of the time period Principal starting $$ amount Rate of Interest Change % to decimal 25% .25 Time in years
9
EXAMPLE Brett deposits $725 into savings account that pays 2.3% interest compounded annually. How much will he pay in interest? T = 8 years = P[(1 + r) t -1] = $725[(1 +.023) 8 -1] = $144.65 Compound Interest = ___ P = r = t =
10
Formula for different rates of time P[(1+r) t -1] = for annually P[(1+r/ 2 ) t*2 -1] = for semi-annually P[(1+r/ 4 ) t*4 -1] = for quarterly P[(1+r/ 12 ) t*12 -1] = for monthly
11
Compound Interest Problems Start now (finish at home)
12
Exit Ticket What do “annually,” “semi-annually,” “quarterly,” and “monthly” mean in terms of compound interest?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.