Monday, 19 October 2015

ACCOUNTING & FINANCE FOR BANKERS - Simple & Compound Interest

JAIIB/DBF Study Notes

ACCOUNTING & FINANCE FOR BANKERS

Simple Interest








'Simple' interest or 'flat rate' interest is the amount of interest paid each y ar in a fixed percentage
of the amount borrowed or lent at the start.


Formula for calculating simple interest :


Interest = Principal x Rate x Time (PRT), where:

'Interest' is the total amount of interest paid


'Principal' is the amount lent or borrowed


'Rate' is the percentage of the principal charged as interest ea h year.
'Time' is the time in years of the loan.


Example :


Principal: 'P' = Rs. 50,000, Interest rate: 'R' = 10% = 0.10, Repayment time: T = 3 years. Find the
amount of interest paid.

Interest = PRT
= 50,000x0.10x3
= Rs. 15,000/-

Compound Interest


Compound interest is paid on the original principal and accumulated part of interest.
Formula for calculating compound interest :




P = A(1 +r/n)^nt, where

P = the principal





A = the amount deposited





r = the rate (expressed as fraction, e.g. 6 per cent = 0.06)



n = number of times per year that interest is compounded



                   t = number of years invested





Frequently compounding of Interest. If the interest is compounded :

Annually = P (1 + r)

Quarterly = P (1 + r/4)^4
Monthly = P (1 + r/12)^12

Example :
The compound interest on Rs. 30,000 at 7% per annum is Rs. 4347. The period (in years)  is:
Amount = Rs. (30000 + 4347) = Rs. 34347.
Let the time be n years. Then

30000(1+7/100)^n = 34347

(107/100)^n = 34347/30000

(107/100)^n = 11449/10000

(107/100)^n = (107/100)^2

n = 2 years.


The Rule of 72: Allows you to determine the number of years before your money doubles whether in
debt or investment. Divide the number 72 by the percentage rate.