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"flossy129" wrote:
Your formula provides an initial payment of £4,443.82 for the example. Using the Goal Seek initial payment of £4,348.97 does in fact produce a goal amount of exactly £1,000,000. [....] I cannot account for this difference As I explained previously, a large part of the difference is due to different compounding assumptions. With the Goal Seek model, we are compounding interest monthly after each payment. With the formula B1*(B4-B3)/((1+B4)^(B2/12)-(1+B3)^(B2/12))/12, we are compounding interest annually. However, I have learned that there is another factor contributing to the inaccuracy of the formula. Apparently, it works (best) if the number of monthly payments is a multiple of 12; that is, B2/12 is an integer. That is not the case with your example of 12y 7m (151 payments). "flossy129" wrote: I cannot account for this difference [...]. if this can be corrected that would also be much appreciated. Hold onto your hat.... :-) I assume B1 contains the target amount (1,000,000), B2 contains the number of payments (151 = 12*12+7), B3 contains the annual payment increase rate (3%), B4 contains the annual investment growth rate (4%). Also, I assume that C4 contains the monthly investment growth rate, namely: (1+B4)^(1/12)-1. And I sassume that C2 contains the number of complete years, namely: =INT(B2/12). And like you, I assume: "the monthly payment is made at the beginning of the month and one month's interest is added at the end of the month. In the next month the new payment is added and 1 months interest is added to the whole balance". Then the following formula computes the initial payment (in C5): =B1 / (IF(B2=12, SUMPRODUCT((1+B3)^(ROW(INDIRECT("1:" & C2))-1) *(((1+C4)^13-1)/C4-1)*(1+C4)^(B2-12*ROW(INDIRECT("1:" & C2))))) + IF(MOD(B2,12)0,(1+B3)^C2*(((1+C4)^(MOD(B2,12)+1)-1)/C4-1))) The last payment is: =C5*(1+B3)^C2. That is not an elegant formula. But it does seem to work. Caveat: The use of INDIRECT makes this a "volatile" formula. It will be recalculated usually unnecessarily whenever Excel recalculates anything in the Excel workbook; for example, whenever any cell in any worksheet is modified. INDIRECT could be avoided by the judicious use of INDEX, which is not "volatile". However, that has its downside as well. For now, I would suggest that you stick with INDIRECT as long as there are not many such formulas in the workbook. |
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