ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Pre-Algebra Videos 217 videos

SAT Math 4.3 Numbers and Operations
2174 Views

SAT Math 4.3 Numbers and Operations

SAT Math 2.4 Numbers and Operations
384 Views

SAT Math 2.4 Numbers and Operations

SAT Math 4.1 Numbers and Operations
230 Views

SAT Math 4.1 Numbers and Operations

See All

Compound Interest 45304 Views


Share It!


Description:

Who wants to be a millionaire? In this video, learn about compound interest, interest rates, and the compound interest formula. You'll be buying that island in the Caribbean in no time, we promise. Okay, maybe it will take a few decades. But patience is a virtue, right?

Language:
English Language
Subjects:

Transcript

00:00

Compound Interest, a la Shmoop. It's not how much you care about camp.

00:09

Question: How do you become a billionaire?

00:15

Answer: This guy... the richest man in America for a long time... said, "Live to be 300."

00:23

If you save money for long enough, you get there.

00:29

If you saved ten grand a year, you get to a billion in a billion divided by ten thousand

00:33

years or... one hundred thousand years. That's a little beyond the current average

00:38

life expectancy. So... there's gotta be another way. Yeah,

00:50

Compound Interest.

00:51

That is, you invest your money -- stock market, bonds, private equity, venture capital...

00:59

whatever... and you make some kind of return.

01:02

Put in a dollar today and get two dollars back in 5 years and you've made about 20%

01:08

a year. So if you compound your interest, you start

01:14

with a new amount each year.

01:16

Let's see how that works in real life. Over the last hundred or so years, the stock

01:21

market has compounded...

01:22

... with dividends reinvested... and forgetting taxes at about 10% a year.

01:49

Let's start with ten grand.

01:51

You've mown a lot of lawns to get there -- and you invest it.

01:54

After 1 year of compounded interest, it's worth $11,000.

01:57

Yep, you made a thousand bucks doing... nothing. The coolest element in compound interest is

02:02

that now you start out the year with eleven grand.

02:06

And you get to... compound it. Blam. And after 1 more year, it's now $12,100

02:13

Let's think about the same problem, but this time we'll use equations. Remember, we start

02:17

with $10,000 and compound at 10% per year for 1 year.

02:33

Note that, after the first year, you made exactly a grand.

02:36

But now -- since you've started with a higher base of 11 grand instead of 10 grand...

02:41

... you get to compound off of a higher number... and in year two you've made a hundred bucks

03:00

more for the privilege. Taking a closer look, we can see that we're

03:06

building a thing called the equation for Compound Interest.

03:10

A is the ending amount, P is the starting amount, r is the interest rate, n is the number

03:16

of times compounding happens per year, and t is the number of years your money is being

03:22

compounded.

03:23

For now, we'll assume compounding happens once a year, so n = 1.

03:28

And the process continues.

03:30

So let's say you did nothing but sit on your fat duff the rest of your life... other than

03:35

save that 10 grand when you were 25...

03:37

...thanks again for mentioning us in your will, Grampa Warbucks.

03:44

Here's what that 10 grand looks like, compounded over an expected 60 remaining years of your

03:50

life.

03:50

Here we are at Year 8.

03:54

We've seen our 10 grand blossom into over 21k.

03:56

It's certainly moving in the right direction... in fact, we've more than doubled our initial

04:01

investment...

04:02

...but it's not quite enough to pack it all in and retire to the Caymans.

04:06

Well, sheesh. It's been only a decade, and we're only sitting on twenty thousand dollars.

04:14

Is this compound interest thing really all it's cracked up to be?

04:21

Let's move on down the road...

04:22

Year 15. We've doubled our money yet again. Nearly 42k, in the bank.

04:29

Assuming that, by this point, we don't owe large sums of money to anyone who is threatening

04:32

to break our legs... Year 22. Doubled again, to over 81,000.

04:40

Year 29. Nearly 160k.

04:45

Up and up we go...

04:51

Until finally... check out Year 60. Over three million samolians.

04:56

Which, sixty years from now, might be almost enough to fill up your gas tank.

05:02

So, we start with $10,000 and compound at 10% per year for 60 years.

05:11

Okay, sure... 60 years is a long time from now...

05:21

...but think how nice it's going to be to have all those millions... just sitting there,

05:24

waiting for you to get old and retire. And this example only demonstrates what happens

05:33

if you invest $10,000 in your entire lifetime.

05:37

If you start with a larger investment...

05:38

...or contribute additional funds along the way...

05:43

...it should be easy to see how one might quite conceivably become a billionaire, if

05:47

they play their cards right. Speaking of gambling, your other option is

05:56

to sit down at the roulette table, put your life savings on "black," and let it ride about

06:01

20 or 30 times.

06:02

Let us know how that goes.

Related Videos

ACT Math 5.2 Pre-Algebra
1939 Views

ACT Math: Pre-Algebra Drill 5, Problem 2. If a and b are prime numbers, how many factors does ab have?

Simplifying Radicals
9741 Views

We don't like knocking people down to size, but we do like simplifying radicals. Join us?

Arithmetic Math
2251 Views

If fleeing criminals always fled the scene of the crime at perfect right angles, it would be much easier to determine their whereabouts. Fortunatel...

Basics of Game Theory
882 Views

Okay, so this probably isn't going to help you master Pokemon Go, but game theory can be applied to all sorts of situations. Even stomping your old...