Explain Banks and simple Interest in detail please.
I also need you to explain all the accounts. :)
Answers
Answered by
3
Answer:
Simple interest is interest calculated on the principal portion of a loan or the original contribution to a savings account. Simple interest does not compound, meaning that an account holder will only gain interest on the principal, and a borrower will never have to pay interest on interest already accrued.
Johnson; “Accounting may be defined as the collection, compilation and systematic recording of business transactions in terms of money, the preparation of financial reports, the analysis and interpretation of these reports and the use of these reports for the information and guidance of management”.
Step-by-step explanation:
hope it's helpful
Answered by
0
Answer:
HEYA AT DOWNWARD FOR S.I I HAVE GIVE FOR VARIOUS BANK ACCOUNTS REFER TO THE ATTACHMENT
Step-by-step explanation:
What is simple interest?
Simple interest is interest calculated on the principal portion of a loan or the original contribution to a savings account. Simple interest does not compound, meaning that an account holder will only gain interest on the principal, and a borrower will never have to pay interest on interest already accrued.
Deeper definition
The formula for calculating simple interest is: Principal * Interest Rate * Term of the loan.
Loans rarely use the simple-interest calculation, but those that do are auto loans and short-term personal loans. A handful of mortgages also use this calculation, most notably the biweekly mortgage. One of the reasons that the biweekly mortgage helps borrowers pay their homes off quicker is that paying the interest more frequently accelerates the payoff date.
With simple-interest loans, the lender applies the payment to the month’s interest first; the remainder of the payment reduces the principal. Each month, the borrower pays the interest in full so that it never accrues. If she pays her loan late, she’ll have to pay more money to cover the additional interest and keep the loan’s specified payoff date. This contrasts with compound interest, which adds a portion of the old interest to the loan. The lender then calculates new interest on the old interest owed by the borrower.
Simple interest is also rare with savings accounts; most savings accounts use the compounding method to calculate interest.
Need to take out a loan? Compare personal loan rates using Bankrate’s loan comparison tool.
Simple interest example
Kara takes out a new short-term personal loan. The loan is a $20,000 auto loan with 3 percent interest for five years, meaning that she’ll owe $3,000 over the life of the loan: $20,000 x .03 x 5. Each month, $50 of her payment goes toward interest on the loan.
Attachments:
Similar questions
Math,
1 month ago
Environmental Sciences,
1 month ago
Social Sciences,
3 months ago
Chemistry,
10 months ago
Math,
10 months ago