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Personal Finance 101 Part 6: Benjamin's Reproductive System 433 Views
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Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:05
Personal Finance 101
- 00:08
Benjamin's Reproductive System
- 00:11
a la Shmoop
- 00:12
So now let's talk about Benjamin's reproductive system.
Full Transcript
- 00:15
You talked a little bit about interest.
- 00:17
You've thrown out a couple terms.
- 00:19
You talked about simple interest and compound interest.
- 00:21
Can you define those terms for us?
- 00:24
You bet. So simple interest is just the interest you get
- 00:28
from typically a debt investment.
- 00:31
Now there are two types of investments in this way.
- 00:34
There's debt and there's equity.
- 00:36
Debt is where you rent money, basically.
- 00:39
Either you're taking out debt
- 00:40
and you're renting money, like a mortgage that your parents probably have.
- 00:45
And when you buy bonds,
- 00:47
you're loaning someone money
- 00:49
and you get interest back.
- 00:52
Typically bond interest is paid twice a year.
- 00:55
And the simple interest -- So let's say you loan someone $10,000
- 00:59
at a five percent interest rate.
- 01:02
You're gonna get five percent of $10,000 a year,
- 01:06
or 2 and a half percent
- 01:08
twice a year.
- 01:10
That two and a half percent that you'll clip,
- 01:12
that $250 that you'll get as interest twice a year,
- 01:15
and then eventually you'll get the principal back,
- 01:17
is the simple interest on the $10,000 loan that you've made someone.
- 01:22
Compounding is different.
- 01:25
So, for example, there's a thing called a "zero-coupon bond,"
- 01:28
where lots of money will become available far down the line,
- 01:32
but the guy who needs the money
- 01:34
has no cash flow to pay interest today.
- 01:38
So a zero-coupon bond pays
- 01:40
zero interest, but the value accretes
- 01:43
year after year after year.
- 01:45
So you might loan someone $5,000 on a zero interest loan,
- 01:49
and seven years later,
- 01:51
you get $10,000 back,
- 01:53
meaning you compounded at about ten percent a year with everything.
- 01:56
So all of a sudden, you get ten grand from your five grand initial thing.
- 02:01
That'd be an example of compounding the interest
- 02:04
into then a one-time payment where you get all your money back.
- 02:08
The more common use of compounded investments
- 02:10
is in the stock market,
- 02:11
where you typically don't take your money out each year.
- 02:15
So you just leave your money in the stock market
- 02:17
or the index funds or whatever vehicle you're using
- 02:19
to invest in the stock market,
- 02:21
and it compounds along year after year
- 02:23
and you just get wealthy doing a whole lot of nothing.
- 02:26
[ cash register sound ]
- 02:27
So it sounds like compound interest is
- 02:29
gonna make you more money if you have the time
- 02:32
- to wait for it. - Exactly.
- 02:34
They call that a liquidity premium
- 02:36
or an illiquidity premium,
- 02:38
meaning if you don't need the money now,
- 02:40
you really get paid for it later.
- 02:43
And it's sort of one of the things people say,
- 02:45
"Well, this is how the rich get richer."
- 02:47
The rich often don't need the cash today,
- 02:49
so they can afford to just leave their money in the market
- 02:51
and it makes life a whole lot easier when you're money's working for you,
- 02:55
as opposed to you have to work for every dollar.
- 02:57
[ typing ]
- 03:00
[ whoop ]
- 03:01
Can you define compound interest and simple interest?
- 03:06
Does compound interest make you more money?
- 03:10
[ impact grunt ]
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