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Savings with interest and regular payments
Hello,
I have searched the internet for help with this, but anything relivent seems geared towards paying off loans rather than saving so my answers are coming out negitive, or just wrong. Hopefully there is an easier way of doing this. I am trying to save up a deposite for my first home... and I want to know how long it'll take me. I have a starting balance, the annual interest rate of my savings account, and how much I can save each month. I also have a target ammount in mind. From this I want to know how many Months I will have to save this before my Target is met. On a seporate issue I want to know, if I want to buy a home in 2 years time, how much I'll have saved by then, but I think this is possible using NPER, again it's currently coming out 'backwards' and it's still needs a target ammount. I hope you can point me in the right direction :-) many thanks, Amy |
Savings with interest and regular payments
I believe you can use NPER for this.
Lets say your starting balance is zero, the ANNUAL rate paid is 3% (of course if you were borrowing it, it would be at least triple that), and you decide you can save $100/month and want $2000 as your goal. =ROUNDUP(NPER(.03/12,-100,0,2000),0) should give you the number of months in even numbers (not 19.54 months, but 20 instead). The trick is to enter that monthly deposit to savings as a negative number. You can set your own amortization/savings estimator up easily enough: A1 = Annual percentage Rate as a percent, i.e. 3% A2 = 12 (both number of months/year) A3 = anticipated monthly deposit (100) A4 = starting balance (0) A5 = Savings Goal (2000) Now after entering those values, drop down to about row 8 (why? because that's what I did <g). Type headers for columns A B C and D on row 8: Balance Deposit Interest Pd New Balance In Row 9, set up these formulas (have to change some in row 10 later) A9 =A4 B9 =A$3 C9 =(A9+B9)*(A$1/A$2) D9 =Sum(A9:C9) In row 10 we need to change the formula in column A to: =D9 fill the other column formulas down from row 9 into row 10, and then fill the formulas in all 4 columns as far down the sheet as you care to. You'll see the $2000 exceeded in the 20th month. If you have extra money (or are a little light one month) , simply type in the actual deposit amount for the month in question, replacing the =A$3 formula in that cell in column B. Everything on down will adjust itself automatically. The accuracy of all of this is a little fuzzy - since most savings institutions break it down to a daily interest rate based on the date of the actual deposit. So you'd have to make the deposit on the same day each month (1st) to get full interest. But the difference in depositing on the 1st, 5th, or even the 15th of a month in any given month probably isn't going to change the end result "goal achieved month" by more than one month at worst. "bonjella" wrote: Hello, I have searched the internet for help with this, but anything relivent seems geared towards paying off loans rather than saving so my answers are coming out negitive, or just wrong. Hopefully there is an easier way of doing this. I am trying to save up a deposite for my first home... and I want to know how long it'll take me. I have a starting balance, the annual interest rate of my savings account, and how much I can save each month. I also have a target ammount in mind. From this I want to know how many Months I will have to save this before my Target is met. On a seporate issue I want to know, if I want to buy a home in 2 years time, how much I'll have saved by then, but I think this is possible using NPER, again it's currently coming out 'backwards' and it's still needs a target ammount. I hope you can point me in the right direction :-) many thanks, Amy |
Savings with interest and regular payments
On Aug 10, 8:03 am, bonjella wrote:
I have a starting balance, the annual interest rate of my savings account, and how much I can save each month. I also have a target ammount in mind. From this I want to know how many Months I will have to save this before my Target is met. Suppose your savings APY is 3%, you have $25,000 already, you plan to save $750 per month, and your goal is $50,000. Then the number of months is: =roundup(nper(3%/12, -750, -25000, 50000), 0) if I want to buy a home in 2 years time, how much I'll have saved by then =rounddown(fv(3%/12, 24, -750, -25000), 0) And you might want to know how much you would have to save each month in order to meet your goal: =roundup(-pmt(3%/12, 24, -25000, 50000), 0) my answers are coming out negitive First, some people would say that the negative results are not necessarily wrong. But like you, I like my results to be positive. In this case, the key is to think of the "present value" (starting balance) and "payments" (monthly amount saved) as outflows (negative) and the "future value" (goal) as an inflow (positive). Then adjust the sign of the result to be positive as you choose. In this case, only the result of the PMT function needs to be changed. Notes: 1. Computing the monthly interest rate as 3%/12 is an estimate. First, since I am talking about the APY, the monthly rate should be computed by (1+3%)^(1/12)-1. But the difference in this case is small -- only $1 per month. Second, interest in some (not all) savings accounts compound daily. But again, the difference is small. On the other hand, many savings accounts compute simple interest based on a daily balance or average daily balance; in that case, compounding is indeed on a monthly basis. 2. I choose between ROUNDUP and ROUNDDOWN in to yield the more conservator answer, depending on what is computed. Again, the difference is not large enough to really make much of a difference. 3. You might want to use the after-tax interest rate. That is the APY times 1-t, where "t" is sum of the applicable federal and state tax rates. |
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