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droopydrawers | 01:32 Wed 28th Nov 2012 | Business & Finance
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WILL £10000 @ 5% PER ANUM BE WORTH IN 5 YEARS.THE INTEREST IS COMPOUNDED YEAR ON YEAR

Many thsnks my old brain doesn't do figures these days,

DD
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Approx £12,760 give or take a £ or 2
I'm curious who is paying 5% for a 5 year investment?
I have some to invest.
-- answer removed --
I agree with mass1061's figures.
I'm also curious about where such a return might be obtained. Bank of India had what i think was a leading 5 year deal at over 4% pa but that has been withdrawn. Interest rates at the top end have fallen over recent weeks and many of the top offers have been withdrawn.
I agree, tell me where they are paying this amount of Interest and I'm In.
It may of course be a question about a 5 year bond/fixed savings account that was taken out some time ago when rates were higher and droopydrawers simply wants to know how much to expect when it matures.
A spreadsheet gives you these answers quite easily. Old brain no barrier.
The snag is, factor my old mate, that most of the population don't even know how to do compound interest - let alone how to feed the figures into a calculator.

Why is it socially acceptable (even thought of as 'humorous' or 'normal') to be functionally innumerate, when a similar inability with literacy would be a matter of shame?
NB - my previous post is not in any way having a pop at droopydrawers - just musing on an aspect of societal attitudes.
I agree with you sunny-dave.
I was really responding to Old_Geezer saying that you don't even need to open up a spreadsheet when there's a ready to hand calculator.

It does seem odd to me too that it's socially acceptable to say " I'm rubbish at Maths" but not so acceptable to say " I find reading or writing difficult"
Simple Formula for Compound interest;

Interest = Principle Sum (in £) x rate (in %) x time (in years)
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100
That'll teach me to be clever with layout! It should be PxRxT all / by 100.
Hi LCDMAN- that is the formula for Simple Interest rather than compund interest.
I can't immediately think of any situation in life where simple interest is used
Compound not compund!
£12,762.82 if you are a non-taxpayer. £12,166.53 if you pay income tax at the basic rate.
Of course this could be a compound interest homework question!
Question Author
Thankyou for the answers, and yes factor30, you got it right too.

This is an old 5 year bond, obviously no longer available. Its the compounded bit that baffles me:-)))
Okay.
Assuming there is no tax to pay on the interest:
At the end of year 1 it's worth £10000 + 5% = £10500
At the end of year 2 it's worth £10500 +5% = £11025
At the end of year 3 it's worth £11025 +5%= £11576.25
At the end of year 4 it's worth £11576.25 +5%= £12155.06
At the end of year 5 it's worth £12155.06 + 5% =£12762.81

If tax is due at the rate of 20% on the interest the net interest rate is 4%, so you would need to adjust the figures accordingly.
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Ahh, your a gem factor30. I got to year 2 ok. and then lost the plot lol. Thankyou

DD

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