ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Personal Finance Videos 838 videos
Personal Finance 101 Part 6: Benjamin's Reproductive System 433 Views
Share It!
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 ]
Related Videos
Get ready to sing some nonsense words, because today we're taking a look at the University of Redlands. You'll know what we're talking about soon e...
Grab a char-dog and watch out for flaming birds, it's time to take a tour of the University of Chicago. Oh and erm, if you would sign this waiver f...
We're talking about the tasks you'll need to complete before graduating here...not a literal life-threatening maze. Colleges aren't that cruel...
What's so great about being smarrrt? Yes, we're aware we spelled it with three R's. Oh, just bear with us. You'll see.
Goals are important. Especially in soccer, because without them, soccer would be boring.* - *denotes sarcasm