T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
884.1 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Mon Jul 10 1995 13:55 | 20 |
| Note 459 has the formula for computing monthly payment given
principal, interest rate and number of payments.
Here's a really stupid BASIC program that does the calculation
100 input "Principal amount "; principal
110 if principal = 0 goto 400
120 input "Annual interest rate as % "; int.rate
int.rate = int.rate / 100.
input "Number of monthly payments "; periods%
200 print "Payment = "; PRINCIPAL / &
((1-(1+(INT.RATE/12.))**-PERIODS%) / &
(INT.RATE/12.))
print
300 goto 100
400 end
|
884.2 | there is a difference | STOHUB::SLBLUZ::WINKLEMAN | Winkleaustinman | Mon Jul 10 1995 17:29 | 13 |
| Invalid assumption: car loans amortize the same way
mortgages do.
From what bankers have told me, the first half of the
term goes more towards the interest, and the second half goes
more towards the principle. fwiw, I was told this in the context
of, "if you want to prepay the principle, do it in the first
half -- doing it in the second half doesn't benefit you".
The bank should be able to tell you the exact schedule,
though I have never asked for one.
-Austin
|
884.3 | Valid Assumption... | SSDEVO::RMCLEAN | | Mon Jul 10 1995 19:23 | 2 |
| That is true for a house payment. Just look at a 30 year loan. You are
only paying $5 or $10 bucks a month for the first 5 years!
|
884.4 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Mon Jul 10 1995 19:45 | 35 |
| Car loans amortize exactly the same way that mortgages do!
However, mortgages are much longer than car loans, making the
principal portion of early payments a mere pittance. Extra
principal payments early on make a big difference for a mortgage,
but don't do much for a car loan. Extra principal payments made
late in the life of the loan don't gain from the "leverage".
If you need more detail, read on after the <FF>
Wes
For car loans, the term is so short that the principal is large
fraction of the payment, even from the very start. Principal is
about 70% of the first payment of a 5 year, 7% loan. A double
extra principal payment might cut the loan by three months.
$9.4K loan interest principal
month 1 $78.33 $121.39
month 60 $1.65 $198.07
Since mortgages have long terms, principal is a very small
fraction of early payments. For a 30 year loan at 7%, the
fraction doesn't reach 50% until about 20 years into the loan,
and it's about 14% for the first payment. An extra payment early
can cut as much as seven months off of the loan term.
$30K loan interest principal
month 1 $175.00 $24.59
month 60 $164.93 $34.66
month 360 $1.16 $198.43
The values above were chosen to get about a $200 payment at
typical interest rates.
|
884.5 | Sign me up :-) | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Mon Jul 10 1995 21:29 | 5 |
| > For car loans, the term is so short that the principal is large
> fraction of the payment, even from the very start. Principal is
> about 70% of the first payment of a 5 year, 7% loan.
Where does one get a 7% APR for a car loan?
|
884.6 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Tue Jul 11 1995 07:30 | 14 |
| > <<< Note 884.4 by NLA0::ONO "The Wrong Stuff" >>>
>
>Car loans amortize exactly the same way that mortgages do!
In my experience, such a broad statement isn't true.
Some car loans amortize like home mortgages. Some don't.
(Almond Joy's got nuts, Mounds don't!)
Often car loans are set up so that all the interest is paid
by the first few payments, before any principle is paid.
I can't quite recall, but there is something like the rule
of 69's which really screws the consumer.
|
884.7 | ? | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jul 11 1995 10:21 | 5 |
| > Often car loans are set up so that all the interest is paid
> by the first few payments, before any principle is paid.
You may be showing your age :-) I don't believe these types
of loans are legal *anymore* ......
|
884.8 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Jul 11 1995 11:53 | 1 |
| 78's.
|
884.9 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:16 | 5 |
| re .6
rule of 69's...
We know where your mind is at.
;-)
|
884.10 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:38 | 11 |
| �� <<< Note 884.9 by PCBUOA::KRATZ >>>
�� re .6
�� rule of 69's...
��
�� We know where your mind is at.
�� ;-)
Really?!?! Could you let me know? I had thought it
hopelessly lost...
So, is the rule-of-78's still used for car loans?
|