News1 min ago
Which Excel formula?
Not being particularly 'au fait' with financial formulas I'm unsure which one to use within Excel to give me the answer to the following:
On a capital sum of money at a fixed rate of interest, how much interest in total would be earned in a (variable) period of time. Eg �15,000 at 6.3% for 14 months or 36 months.
I can work it out with a pencil and paper, but would love to have the right formula so that I can vary the individual components without using up too much paper!
Hope someone can point me in the right direction.
On a capital sum of money at a fixed rate of interest, how much interest in total would be earned in a (variable) period of time. Eg �15,000 at 6.3% for 14 months or 36 months.
I can work it out with a pencil and paper, but would love to have the right formula so that I can vary the individual components without using up too much paper!
Hope someone can point me in the right direction.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Efkay. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I know that this does not directly answer your question but you might find the following nifty interest calculater to be useful :-
http://www.mw-plus.com/webdic.php
http://www.mw-plus.com/webdic.php
Go to Excel - click insert - select function.
In the left column highlight financial
and have a browse through the suggestions in the right column.
I couldn't work out which one to use!! If any.
Alternatively if you can do it on paper you can do it in excel - just set up cells for the values and the interest cell will contain the formual using the previous cells.
eg A1 is Capital / b1 is interest rate / c1 is period / d1 is interest earned. Now work out the calculation you need to do to get the interest earned.
If you do it this way you can also vary all the values.
In the left column highlight financial
and have a browse through the suggestions in the right column.
I couldn't work out which one to use!! If any.
Alternatively if you can do it on paper you can do it in excel - just set up cells for the values and the interest cell will contain the formual using the previous cells.
eg A1 is Capital / b1 is interest rate / c1 is period / d1 is interest earned. Now work out the calculation you need to do to get the interest earned.
If you do it this way you can also vary all the values.
Machecoul - thanks for taking the time to reply and I too reacted the same way (I couldn't work out which one to use!! If any.)
Likewise, if I could actually do as you suggest ...Now work out the calculation you need to do to get the interest earned.... I wouldn't have needed to ask this forum! Sad aren't I !! In all honesty, I failed to grasp the ins and outs of things like 'open brackets', 'close brackets' way back when in school - so I haven't a hope now!! ;-)
Likewise, if I could actually do as you suggest ...Now work out the calculation you need to do to get the interest earned.... I wouldn't have needed to ask this forum! Sad aren't I !! In all honesty, I failed to grasp the ins and outs of things like 'open brackets', 'close brackets' way back when in school - so I haven't a hope now!! ;-)