“What is the point of studying all this? It will never help us later on in our lives.” Sounds familiar? Well, that is something that all of us have asked our teachers or parents at some point of our school life to present the redundancy of learning a difficult math concept. One such concept is compound interest.
The concept of compound interest can help turn a few bucks into a respectable corpus over a period of time – so much so that the money reinvested might even be greater than the original amount.
Want to understand the power of compounding and its application in the financial world? Then read on!
Compound interest, as we are all aware, is when one receives interest not only on the principal sum but also the interest that is reinvested. While this might seem like a rather simplistic understanding its power will be realised when the amounts are invested in for longer durations of time. With every successive year of reinvesting the interest, the size of the corpus increases, and the interest earned for the succeeding year also increases, all other things remaining the same. Compounding is similar to the multiplier effect.
For example, an Rs. 1,000 investment at an annual interest rate of 8% per annum will grow to Rs. 50,000 in 20 years. The same investment at a rate of 10% can, in 20 years, fetch you Rs. 63,000. And, by staying invested for a longer period, your capital will earn more money for you.
Watch this video to learn more about compounding :
Compound interest is paid on the accrued interest i.e. on the principal amount and the additional deposits and interest.
The time value of money is crucial for the investor to realise the benefits of compounding. As the money can earn compound interest, when invested, it has more value in the present than in the future. The time value of money is calculated using the future value, the interest rate and the time frame. Each time frame factors in the number of compounding periods within it.
The benefits of compounding are as follows –
Mutual funds are designed to ensure that investors make gains when the NAV per unit rises. Over longer durations of time, the increase in the value will be more tangible and the risks will be averaged out. The investor will earn dividends on the fund invested as well as the dividend reinvested (if opted for a dividend plan).
An interesting thing to note is that with each passing year, the value of the earliest investments will see the maximum growth. The older investment commands a higher value.
The power of compounding is the secret to wealth creation. The quote by Benjamin Franklin summarises the power of compounding accurately – “it is the stone that will turn all your lead into gold. Remember that money is of a prolific, generating nature. Money can beget money, and its offspring can beget more.”
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