Finance loan interest rate homework

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the interest rate for a loan of $30,000 that is paid back after 6 years with a final value of $36,295, specifically focusing on quarterly compounding. Participants are examining the discrepancies between calculated interest rates, with one participant reporting 6.33% and another suggesting it should be 3.2%.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are questioning the method used to arrive at the reported interest rates, with one suggesting that the variable N should represent years rather than the number of payments. There is also a discussion about the appropriateness of the finance solver for this specific scenario, particularly regarding whether it accounts for single payments versus regular installments.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the problem setup and questioning the assumptions made in calculations. Some guidance has been offered regarding the use of the finance solver and its limitations, but no consensus has been reached on the correct approach or solution.

Contextual Notes

There appears to be confusion regarding the parameters used in the finance solver, particularly the interpretation of N and the nature of the loan repayment structure. This may affect the calculations and the resulting interest rate.

paddo
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Homework Statement
A loan of $30,000 is paid back after 6 years with a final value of $36,295. At what interest rate, compounding quarterly, has this money been invested?
Relevant Equations
Finance solver
I got 6.33% but apparently it's 3.2%
 
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And are we supposed to guess how you got that? I suppose we could just speculate about where you went wrong (or didn't) but it seems like a waste of time. How about you show your work?
 
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paddo said:
Problem Statement: A loan of $30,000 is paid back after 6 years with a final value of $36,295. At what interest rate, compounding quarterly, has this money been invested?
Relevant Equations: Finance solver

I got 6.33% but apparently it's 3.2%

If an amount A is invested for N years at a rate r\,\% and compounded quarterly, then the final value is <br /> F = A\left(1 + \frac{r}{400}\right)^{4N}. You are given F, N and A and asked to solve for r.
 
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@paddo, what does the solver do if you enter 6 for N instead of 24? I'm thinking that N represents the number of years, not the number of payments. There is already a field for the number of payments per year (PpY). The interest rate that I get by direct calculation is a little under 3.2%.
 
Mark44 said:
@paddo, what does the solver do if you enter 6 for N instead of 24? I'm thinking that N represents the number of years, not the number of payments. There is already a field for the number of payments per year (PpY). The interest rate that I get by direct calculation is a little under 3.2%.

I don't think that solver is designed to deal with the situation in the OP in any event.

I think it's designed to deal with the situation where regular repayments are made throughout the term, thereby reducing the balance on which interest is charged. The OP suggests instead a single payment at the end of the term.

If an amount P is lent at a rate of r\,\% to repaid by n equal installments of A per year over Y years, then the balance outstanding after k+1 periods is <br /> B_{k+1} = B_k\left(1 + \frac{r}{100n}\right) - A on the assumption that the interest is calculated before the payment is deducted (reasonable, since it allows the lender to charge more interest). This recurrence relation can be solved subject to B_0 = P to yield <br /> B_k =\left(P - \frac{100nA}{r}\right)\left(1 + \frac{r}{100n}\right)^k + \frac{100nA}{r}. Now after Yn periods the loan should be fully repaid, so B_{Yn} = <br /> \left(P - \frac{100nA}{r}\right)\left(1 + \frac{r}{100n}\right)^{Yn} + \frac{100nA}{r} = 0 which in terms of the total amount repaid T = nYA is \left(P - \frac{100T}{Yr}\right)\left(1 + \frac{r}{100n}\right)^{Yn} + \frac{100T}{Yr} = 0. This is much more difficult to solve for r than the equation which holds where the entire amount outstanding is repaid at the end of the term:
<br /> T - P\left(1 + \frac{r}{100n}\right)^{Yn} = 0
 

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