Bank deposits, over time, usually have compound interest . That is, interest is computed on an account such as a savings account or a checking account and the interest is added to the account. Because the interest is added to the account (the alternative would be to mail the interest to the customer), the interest itself earns interest during the next time period for computing interest. This is what is meant when it is said that the interest compounds . See Salas and Hille, page 448-449. The time interval between the occasions at which interest is added to the account is called the compounding period . The chart below describes some of the common compounding periods: Show
The interest rate, together with the compounding period and the balance in the account, determines how much interest is added in each compounding period. The basic formula is this: the interest to be added = (interest rate for one period)*(balance at the beginning of the period).Generally, regardless of the compounding period, the interest rate is given as an ANNUAL RATE (sometimes called the nominal rate) labeled with an r. Here is how the interest rate for one period is computed from the nominal rate and the compounding period:
If we put these two formulas together we get
Interest Rate For One Period with various periods and a nominal annual rate of 6% per year
1. "Nominal" in ordinary English can indicate something formal, in name only, but not quite reality and perhaps something that needs further description. It fits well here, because the effect of compounding is a real rate of interest slightly higher than the nominal rate of interest. Click here to return to the first use of
the word "nominal". What Happens To An Account With Compounded Interest And No Withdrawals?
Pj+1=P j + the interest earned by Pj in one compounding period. In words, the balance at the end of a new compounding period is the balance at the end of the preceding period plus the interest that older balance earned during the compounding period. The interest earned is r * (1/K) * Pj,, as described above in the interest calculation for one period. Thus, at the end of the (j+1)th period,
In the last line of the table above, Pj has been factored from the two terms of the previous equality. Here are some examples of the use of this formula, period by period:
For The Saver, There Is An Advantage To Compounding More Frequently. If One Fixes The Nominal Interest Rate And The Total Time The Account Collects Interest, More Frequent Compounding Produces More Interest. In the analysis below,we assume that the total time is a whole number multiple of compounding periods.If one fixes the initial balance (P 0), the nominal interest rate (r) and the duration of the deposit (T, in years) , you earn more interest with more compounding periods per year (K). The number of compounding periods that make up T will be KT. To avoid fractions of compounding periods, which were not analyzed above, assume that K is such that KT is a whole number. Then, by the formula above,P KT = P 0 * (1+r/K)KT.With T and r fixed (not changing) for this discussion, view the right-hand side above as a function of real variable K, say f(K). As long as 1+r/K is positive, this function will have a derivative: (d/dK)[f(K)] = P 0 * (1+r/K)KT * [ T * ln(1+r/K) + K * T* (1/(1+r/K))*(-r/(K2 )) ].This simplifies somewhat:
(d/dK)[f(K)] = P 0 * (1+r/K)KT * T* [ ln(1+r/K) - r/(K+r)) ] It well known that for x in the interval [0,1), we have ln(1+x) >= x - x2/2. If we substitute r/K for x and assume that r>0 and K>r, we find thatln(1+r/K) - r/(K+r)) >= (K-r)r2/(2 K2 (K+r)) > 0 ["ln" refers to the natural logarithm, the log to the base e.] Note that the derivative exists and is positive when P 0 , r, K, and T are all positive and K > r (which are natural assumptions about a savings account!). Since the derivative is positive, the original function f(K) is increasing. Thus, larger values of K make f(K) larger. If we make K larger and also make KT be an integer, then f(K) happens to coincide with P KT . Thus compounding more frequently produces more interest (subject to the assumption that T is a whole number multiple of the compounding period). If T is not a multiple of the compounding period, the conclusion depends strongly on the account's policies on withdrawals in the middle of a compounding period. For example, in some certificates of deposits the bank may charge a substantial penalty for "early" withdrawal. What if we are utterly greedy, and insist that the bank compound our interest continuously?What happens if we make the compounding period a millionth of a second, and ever smaller? Does the amount of interest increase forever without bounds, or do we reach a ceiling (a limit!) as we compound more and more frequently?
g(K) = ln(P0) + (KT) * ln(1+r/K).As K approaches positive infinity, we have a race between two factors because KT is also approaching positive infinity (we assume that T is positive) while r/K approaches 0. As r/K approaches 0, 1+r/K approaches 1 and ln(1+r/K) approaches 0. Thus we seem to have infinity*0 in our limit as K approches positive infinity. Recall that L'Hôspital's rule applies to indeterminate forms 0/0 and infinity/infinity. Rewrite the difficult part of g(K) to take advantage of this rule: g(K) = ln(P0) + ln(1+r/K) / [1/(KT)].Note that 1/(KT) is approaching 0, so that we have the indeterminate form of 0/0. By L'Hôspital's rule, examine the limit of a new ratio which is the ratio of the separate derivatives of the top and bottom of the indeterminate form: {[1/(1+r/K)](-r/(K2)} / {-(KT)-2*T}After simplifying this new ratio, one has [1/(1+r/K)] * (r/T) * [(KT)2] / (K2) = (rT) * [1/(1+r/K)].As K approaches positive infinity, this new ratio approaches (rT) * [1/(1+0)] = rT. Thus, g(K) has the limit ln(P0) + rT as K approaches positive infinity. Because ex is a continuous function, we can apply ex to the function g(K) to get f(K) back AND a limit for f(K) which is e[ln(P0)+rT]=P 0*erT.Thus, compounding faster and faster does have a finite limit; this finite limit defines what economists (and bankers) mean by continuous compounding. If compounding is continuous at a nominal interest rate of r for a duration T (in years) with an beginning balance of P0, the balance at the end is P 0*erT.Your comments and questions are welcome. Please use the email address at www.math.hawaii.edu Edited on September 6, 2006. What does 6% compounded annually mean?Imagine you put $100 in a savings account with a yearly interest rate of 6% . After one year, you have 100+6=$106 . After two years, if the interest is simple , you will have 106+6=$112 (adding 6% of the original principal amount each year.)
What is 6% compounded monthly?For this reason, lenders often like to present interest rates compounded monthly instead of annually. For example, a 6% mortgage interest rate amounts to a monthly 0.5% interest rate. However, after compounding monthly, interest totals 6.17% compounded annually.
What rate of interest compounded annually is the same as the rate of interest?The nominal rate is the interest rate as stated, usually compounded more than once per year. The effective rate (or effective annual rate) is a rate that, compounded annually, gives the same interest as the nominal rate. If two interest rates have the same effective rate, we say they are equivalent.
What rate compounded quarterly is equivalent to 6%?The nominal annual rate compounded semi-annually is 6.045%, which is equivalent to an annual rate of 6% compounded quarterly.
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