Showing posts with label Regular investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regular investing. Show all posts

Thursday 27 November 2008

**Understanding the Power of Compounding

Understanding the Power of Compounding

Compounding in Action

The investment rate assumes a return net of taxes and fees.
The effect of inflation on the purchasing power of the FV can be offset by increasing your annual contributions by a like percentage. As your income increases, so too should your investment contributions.

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The Future Value of investing $1,000 per annum, when compounded by the annual rate of 6% for the number of years are as shown below:

Rate 6%

Years... FV
10 years 13,181
20 years 36,786
30 years 70,058
40 years 154,762
50 years 290,336

The once-only lump sum invested at the same annual rate for the years to provide the same FV as the corresponding sum are as shown here:

Years... Initial once-only lump sum
10 years 7,360
20 years 11,470
30 years 13,765
40 years 15,046
50 years 15,762

A lump sum of $7360 invested for 10 years at 6 percent will produce the same FV ($13,181) as $1000 a year for 10 years.

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The Future Value of investing $1,000 per annum, when compounded by the annual rate of 8% for the number of years are as shown below:

Rate 8%

Years... FV
10 years 14,487
20 years 45,762
30 years 113,283
40 years 259,057
50 years 573,770

The once-only lump sum invested at the same annual rate for the years to provide the same FV as the corresponding sum are as shown here:

Years... Initial once-only lump sum
10 years 6,710
20 years 9,818
30 years 11,258
40 years 11,925
50 years 12,233

A lump sum of $6,710 invested for 10 years at 8 percent will produce the same FV ($14,487) as $1000 a year for 10 years.

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The Future Value of investing $1,000 per annum, when compounded by the annual rate of 10% for the number of years are as shown below:

Rate 10%

Years... FV
10 years 15,937
20 years 57,275
30 years 164,494
40 years 442,593
50 years 1,163,909

The once-only lump sum invested at the same annual rate for the years to provide the same FV as the corresponding sum are as shown here:

Years... Initial once-only lump sum
10 years 6,145
20 years 8,514
30 years 9,427
40 years 9,779
50 years 9.915

A lump sum of $6,145 invested for 10 years at 10 percent will produce the same FV ($15,937) as $1000 a year for 10 years.

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The Future Value of investing $1,000 per annum, when compounded by the annual rate of 12% for the number of years are as shown below:

Rate 12%

Years... FV
10 years 17,549
20 years 72,052
30 years 241,333
40 years 767,091
50 years 2,400,018

The once-only lump sum invested at the same annual rate for the years to provide the same FV as the corresponding sum are as shown here:

Years... Initial once-only lump sum
10 years 5,650
20 years 7,469
30 years 8,055
40 years 8,244
50 years 8,304

A lump sum of $5,650 invested for 10 years at 15 percent will produce the same FV ($17,549) as $1000 a year for 10 years.

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The Future Value of investing $1,000 per annum, when compounded by the annual rate of 15% for the number of years are as shown below:

Rate 15%

Years... FV
10 years 20,304
20 years 102,444
30 years 434,745
40 years 1,779,090
50 years 7,217,716

The once-only lump sum invested at the same annual rate for the years to provide the same FV as the corresponding sum are as shown here:

Years... Initial once-only lump sum
10 years 5,019
20 years 6,259
30 years 6,566
40 years 6,642
50 years 6,661

A lump sum of $5,019 invested for 10 years at 15 percent will produce the same FV ($20,304) as $1000 a year for 10 years.

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Note:
It is not so much the increase in FV over the early 10-year periods of the savings plan, but the increase over the final 10-year period that yields the big bucks.

For instance, if we reference the compounding at 10 percent, FV increased by $41,338 between years 10 and 20, while the increase between years 40 and 50 was $721,316.

Thereafter, if you start your investment plan at age 30 rather than 20, the $1,000 a year you spent before that rather than invested will have cost you $721,316.

The greatest deterrent to an investment plan is not so much the fortitude to put aside a small percentage of income, but the willpower not to steal from the fund until your regular employment income ceases. Anyone can become rich if they start an investment plan early in life.

Of course, the more you love your work, the longer you will be employed and the more savings you will accumulate. If you find the thought of working until you are 70 abhorrent, then the thought of working at 30 or 40 years of age will be even less attractive; in which case, investing is probably irrelevant because you’re going to have a miserable or unfulfilled life anyway. People who hate working are more likely to become welfare dependent.

Lump sum investing
A lump sum of $7,360 invested for 10 years at 6 percent will produce the same FV ($13,181) as $1,000 a year for 10 years.

A lump sum of $9,779 invested for 40 years at 10 percent will produce the same FV ($442,593) as $1,000 a year for 40 years.

If the same lump sum were invested 10 years earlier – that is, allowed to compound for 50 years, rather than 40 – the nest egg will be boosted by a further $705,372 to $1,147,965.

Have you ever thought about putting something aside for your kids that they can’t touch for 50 years?

Sentiment and moral gratification usually centre on diminishing their incentive to achieve their own sense of self-satisfaction by helping them when they get married or want to buy a house.

If they are like 98 percent of people, the time they really need financial help is after they have lived the good life and have limited savings and no career income.

Material assets are not so important when you have the greatest asset of all: youth.


Related readings:
Oriental Holdings Bhd: The Buy-Hold Advantage
http://www.horizon.my/2008/11/oriental-holdings-bhd-the-buy-hold-advantage/

Oriental Holdings Berhad - What if You had Bought and Held? I happened to be reading the Annual Report of Oriental Holdings Berhad (ORIENT) the other day and came across a statement by Chairman Dato Loh Cheng Yean:

“A holding of 1,000 stocks in Oriental when it was listed in 1964 would translate into 40,255 Oriental stocks worth RM263,670, based on the share price of RM6.55 at the end of 2007. In addition the stocks would have earned a total gross dividend of RM137,660. The gross dividends received and the appreciation in value is equivalent to a remarkable average rate of return of 14.60% for each of the 44 years.”

This sounds pretty good… see once again we’re talking 40 years. I find Oriental Holdings to be quite “remarkable” because it is such a diverse collection of different businesses which include auto assembly, auto parts manufacturing, oil palm, hotels, property etc. But 85% of its RM498 million Operating Profit is from auto and oil palm.



The Story of Anne Scheiber
http://www.horizon.my/2008/11/the-story-of-anne-scheiber/
Maxwell recounts the story of Anne Scheiber, an elderly and thrifty lady who lived in New York and worked for the Inland Revenue Service. When Scheiber retired at age fifty-one, she was only making $3,150 a year. She was treated poorly by her employer and was never promoted. Yet when Anne Scheiber died in 1995 at the age of 101, it was discovered that she left an estate to Yeshiva University worth US$22 million!
How did a public service worker with minimal salary accumulate such a staggering wealth?

Comments by: banking88 on November 25th, 2008 12:13 pm
yes, the key is to invest for the long-term…your wealth would multiply with componding returns…now it’s a good time to enter the market using the dollar cost averaging method…