Financial Mathematics — Interest & Annuities
(The Math Behind Every Loan, Deposit, EMI & Investment!)
Every banker calculates interest daily. SI for short-term. CI for deposits. EMI for home loans. This chapter covers ALL the math — SI, CI, Rule of 72, Fixed vs Floating, Front-end vs Back-end, Ordinary Annuity, Annuity Due, EMI formula, and Sinking Funds.
Banky Does the MATH! 🧮📐
A customer asks: “What’s my EMI for a ₹10 lakh home loan at 10.5% for 15 years?” Banky needs the FORMULA!
All Formulas — Simple to Advanced
📖 Part 1 — Simple Interest vs Compound Interest
P = Principal, r = rate (decimal), t = time (years). Interest on ORIGINAL principal only.
Example: ₹60,000 at 12% for 2 years → SI = 60,000 × 0.12 × 2 = ₹14,400. ₹40,000 at 11% for 3 years → SI = ₹13,200 (exam question!)
n = compounding frequency. Annual: n=1. Quarterly: n=4. Monthly: n=12. MORE frequent = MORE interest. CI always ≥ SI.
Rule of 72: Money DOUBLES in 72 ÷ rate years. At 6% → 12 yrs. At 8% → 9 yrs. At 12% → 6 yrs.
Depreciation: BV = Original × (1 − rate)n. ₹20,000, 10%, 3 yrs → ₹14,580.
📋 Part 2 — Fixed vs Floating, Front-end vs Back-end
Fixed: Rate stays same for entire tenure. Usually HIGHER. No market risk. Floating: Changes with benchmark (MCLR). Usually LOWER initially.
Front-end: Interest deducted UPFRONT (bill discounting). Effective rate HIGHER. Back-end: Full amount disbursed. Interest charged later. Normal for term loans.
Product method (CC/OD/SB): Daily balance × days = product. Sum × rate ÷ 365 = interest.
💰 Part 3 — Annuities: Ordinary vs Due
Annuity = Series of FIXED payments at REGULAR intervals. EMI, RD, rent = annuities.
Ordinary: Payment at END (salary). Due: Payment at BEGINNING (rent). Due > Ordinary by factor (1+i).
“Special Annuity” is NOT a real type! Only Ordinary and Due exist.
🏦 Part 4 — EMI + Sinking Fund
P = loan, r = monthly rate, n = total instalments. First EMIs = MORE interest. Later = MORE principal.
3 Repayment Methods: (1) Equal principal + declining interest. (2) EMI (equal total). (3) Bullet/balloon (all at end).
Sinking Fund: Equal periodic deposits to accumulate target amount. Used for equipment replacement, bullet loan repayment.
Exam-Ready Points
🎯 Must Remember!
- SI = P×r×t. CI: A = P(1+r/n)nt. CI ≥ SI always.
- Rule of 72: Doubling time = 72 ÷ rate.
- More frequent compounding = MORE total interest (monthly > quarterly > annual).
- Fixed rate: Stays same, usually HIGHER. Floating: Changes with MCLR, usually LOWER initially.
- Front-end: Interest upfront, effective rate HIGHER. Back-end: Full disbursement, interest later.
- “Special Annuity” is NOT a type! Only Ordinary (end) and Due (beginning).
- Due values > Ordinary by (1+i) factor.
- EMI = P×r×(1+r)n/[(1+r)n−1]. Interest-heavy at start, principal-heavy at end.
- Sinking Fund: When specified amount needed at specified future date.
- ₹40,000 at 11% SI for 3 years = ₹13,200.
- All compounding statements correct: Shorter period = more interest, CI on P+accumulated, CI > SI.
📝 Past Exam Questions
Last-Minute Flash Cards
⚡ Module C • Chapter 3 (Unit 21) Done!
- SI = P×r×t (flat). CI = P(1+r/n)nt (snowball). Rule of 72 = 72÷rate.
- Fixed: Same rate (higher). Floating: Market-linked (lower initially). Front-end = upfront deduction.
- Ordinary: End. Due: Beginning. Due > Ordinary by (1+i). “Special” = NOT a type!
- EMI = P×r×(1+r)n/[(1+r)n−1]. Interest-heavy start. 3 methods: Equal P, EMI, Bullet.
- Sinking Fund: Periodic deposits for target amount. For equipment/bullet loans.
Banky says: “SI = flat, CI = snowball! Rule of 72! EMI = most used formula! Ordinary = END, Due = BEGINNING! Now I can calculate ANYTHING!” 🎉🧮
Next: Chapter 22 — Financial Mathematics: YTM (Bonds!) 💪