IB Mathematics AI – Topic 1

Number and Algebra: Financial Mathematics

Compound Interest

Definition & Formula

Definition: Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. Money grows exponentially over time.

Compound Interest Formula:

\[ FV = PV(1 + r)^n \]

where:

  • FV: Future Value (final amount)
  • PV: Present Value (initial principal)
  • r: Interest rate per compounding period (as decimal)
  • n: Number of compounding periods

Annual Compounding with Different Frequencies:

\[ FV = PV\left(1 + \frac{r}{k}\right)^{nk} \]

where k = number of times interest is compounded per year

  • Annually: k = 1
  • Semi-annually: k = 2
  • Quarterly: k = 4
  • Monthly: k = 12
  • Daily: k = 365

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Tips:

  • Convert percentage to decimal: 5% = 0.05
  • Match time units: if rate is annual, n should be in years
  • For monthly compounding with annual rate: divide rate by 12
  • Use GDC Finance Solver for complex calculations

📝 Worked Example 1: Compound Interest

Question: Sarah invests $5,000 in a savings account paying 4% annual interest compounded monthly. How much will she have after 3 years?

Solution:

Identify variables:

PV = $5,000 (initial investment)

Annual rate = 4% = 0.04

Time = 3 years

Compounded monthly: k = 12

Calculate:

Number of compounding periods: n × k = 3 × 12 = 36

Rate per period: r/k = 0.04/12 = 0.003333...

Using formula:

\[ FV = 5000\left(1 + \frac{0.04}{12}\right)^{36} \]

\[ = 5000(1.003333...)^{36} \]

\[ = 5000(1.127328...) \]

\[ = 5636.64 \]

Using GDC Finance Solver:

N = 36, I% = 4, PV = -5000, PMT = 0, FV = solve

Answer: $5,636.64

Depreciation

Definition

Definition: Depreciation is the decrease in value of an asset over time. Assets like cars, computers, and machinery typically lose value at a constant percentage rate each year.

Depreciation Formula:

\[ FV = PV(1 - r)^n \]

Note: (1 - r) because value is decreasing

Key Difference from Compound Interest:

Depreciation uses (1 - r) instead of (1 + r) because the value is decreasing

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Tips:

  • Depreciation uses subtraction: (1 - r), not (1 + r)
  • Same formula structure as compound interest, just negative growth
  • Depreciation rate of 15% means asset retains 85% of value each year

📝 Worked Example 2: Depreciation

Question: A car is purchased for $28,000 and depreciates at 18% per year. What will the car be worth after 5 years?

Solution:

Identify variables:

PV = $28,000

Depreciation rate: r = 18% = 0.18

Time: n = 5 years

Calculate:

\[ FV = 28000(1 - 0.18)^5 \]

\[ = 28000(0.82)^5 \]

\[ = 28000(0.3707) \]

\[ = 10,379.30 \]

Answer: $10,379.30 (or $10,379 to nearest dollar)

Loans & Amortization

Definition

Definition: A loan involves borrowing money and repaying it with regular payments over time. Each payment includes both principal (original loan amount) and interest.

Loan Payment Formula:

\[ PMT = PV \times \frac{r(1+r)^n}{(1+r)^n - 1} \]

where:

  • PMT: Regular payment amount
  • PV: Loan amount (principal)
  • r: Interest rate per payment period
  • n: Total number of payments

Key Concepts:

  • Amortization: Process of paying off loan over time with regular payments
  • Principal: Amount of each payment that reduces the loan balance
  • Interest: Amount of each payment that goes to the lender
  • Early payments: more interest, less principal
  • Later payments: less interest, more principal

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Tips:

  • Always use GDC Finance Solver for loans – formula is complex
  • For monthly payments with annual rate: divide rate by 12
  • PV is positive (loan received), PMT is negative (payment made)
  • FV = 0 for fully amortized loans

📝 Worked Example 3: Loan Repayment

Question: A couple takes out a mortgage of $250,000 at 5.4% annual interest, compounded monthly. They will repay the loan with monthly payments over 25 years.

(a) Calculate the monthly payment amount.

(b) Calculate the total amount paid over 25 years.

Solution:

Identify variables:

PV = $250,000

Annual interest rate: 5.4%

Monthly rate: r = 5.4%/12 = 0.45% = 0.0045

Number of payments: n = 25 × 12 = 300 months

FV = 0 (loan fully paid off)

(a) Using GDC Finance Solver (TVM Solver):

N = 300

I% = 5.4

PV = 250000

PMT = solve

FV = 0

P/Y = 12 (payments per year)

C/Y = 12 (compounding per year)

Result: PMT = -$1,538.46

(Negative because it's money paid out)

Answer (a): Monthly payment = $1,538.46

(b) Total amount paid:

\[ \text{Total} = PMT \times n = 1538.46 \times 300 = 461,538 \]

Answer (b): $461,538

Interest paid = $461,538 - $250,000 = $211,538

Annuities

Definition

Definition: An annuity is a series of equal regular payments or deposits made over time, typically for investment or retirement purposes.

Future Value of Annuity Formula:

\[ FV = PMT \times \frac{(1+r)^n - 1}{r} \]

Present Value of Annuity Formula:

\[ PV = PMT \times \frac{1 - (1+r)^{-n}}{r} \]

Types of Annuities:

  • Ordinary Annuity: Payments made at end of each period
  • Annuity Due: Payments made at beginning of each period

Common Applications:

  • Retirement savings plans
  • Regular investment contributions
  • Pension payments
  • Savings account deposits

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Tips:

  • Use GDC Finance Solver – annuity formulas are complex
  • For savings: PV = 0, solve for FV
  • PMT is negative when you're making deposits
  • Most IB problems assume ordinary annuity (end of period)

📝 Worked Example 4: Annuity (Retirement Savings)

Question: Maria deposits $500 at the end of each month into a retirement account earning 6% annual interest, compounded monthly. How much will she have after 30 years?

Solution:

Identify variables:

PMT = -$500 (monthly deposit, negative because money out)

Annual rate: 6%

Monthly rate: r = 6%/12 = 0.5% = 0.005

Number of payments: n = 30 × 12 = 360 months

PV = 0 (no initial lump sum)

FV = ? (what we want to find)

Using GDC Finance Solver:

N = 360

I% = 6

PV = 0

PMT = -500

FV = solve

P/Y = 12, C/Y = 12

Result: FV = $502,257.65

Verification using formula:

\[ FV = 500 \times \frac{(1.005)^{360} - 1}{0.005} \]

\[ = 500 \times \frac{6.023 - 1}{0.005} = 500 \times 1004.515 \]

\[ = 502,257.65 \]

Answer: $502,258 (rounded)

Total deposited = $500 × 360 = $180,000

Interest earned = $502,258 - $180,000 = $322,258

Using the Finance Solver on Calculator

TVM Solver Overview

TVM Variables (Time Value of Money):

  • N: Total number of payment periods
  • I%: Annual interest rate (as percentage, not decimal)
  • PV: Present Value (initial amount)
  • PMT: Regular payment amount
  • FV: Future Value (final amount)
  • P/Y: Payments per year
  • C/Y: Compounding periods per year

Accessing TVM Solver:

TI-84 series: APPS → Finance → TVM Solver

Casio: MENU → TVM

Sign Conventions:

  • Positive: Money received (inflow)
  • Negative: Money paid out (outflow)
  • Example: Deposit $1000 → PV = -1000; Receive $1500 → FV = 1500

Common Problem Types:

Problem TypeWhat to SolveKey Settings
Compound InterestFVPMT = 0
Loan PaymentPMTFV = 0
Savings AnnuityFVPV = 0
How long to reach goalNSet FV target

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Tips:

  • Set P/Y and C/Y correctly! Usually both equal to 12 for monthly
  • Enter I% as percentage (6 not 0.06)
  • Use correct signs: outflows negative, inflows positive
  • Always check P/Y and C/Y before solving
  • For annual compounding: P/Y = C/Y = 1

📊 Quick Reference Summary

Compound Interest

  • \(FV = PV(1+r)^n\)
  • Money grows exponentially
  • PMT = 0 in calculator

Depreciation

  • \(FV = PV(1-r)^n\)
  • Value decreases
  • Use (1-r) not (1+r)

Loans

  • Solve for PMT
  • FV = 0 (paid off)
  • Use Finance Solver

Annuities

  • Regular payments
  • PV = 0 for savings
  • Solve for FV

🖩 Finance Solver Quick Setup Guide

Step-by-step for any financial problem:

  1. Identify what you're solving for (N, I%, PV, PMT, or FV)
  2. Enter all known values
  3. Set P/Y and C/Y (usually 12 for monthly, 1 for annual)
  4. Use correct signs (outflows negative, inflows positive)
  5. Navigate to unknown variable and press SOLVE/ALPHA ENTER

✍️ IB Exam Strategy

  1. Always use Finance Solver for IB exams – it's expected
  2. Show your inputs: Write N=, I%=, PV=, etc.
  3. Check P/Y and C/Y first – most common mistake source
  4. Use correct signs: Sketch money flow diagram if needed
  5. Round final answers to nearest cent for money
  6. State units: Always include currency symbol
  7. For "how much interest": Calculate FV - PV

🚫 Top Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Forgetting to set P/Y and C/Y in calculator
  2. Using wrong sign convention (positive/negative)
  3. Entering I% as decimal instead of percentage
  4. Using (1+r) for depreciation instead of (1-r)
  5. Not converting annual rate to monthly when needed
  6. Forgetting PMT = 0 for compound interest problems
  7. Forgetting FV = 0 for loan repayment problems
  8. Not showing calculator inputs in exam answers

🎯 Recognizing Problem Types

Key phrases to identify problem type:

→ Compound Interest:

"Invest", "deposit", "savings account", "compound", "grows"

→ Depreciation:

"Decreases in value", "depreciate", "car value", "loses value"

→ Loan:

"Borrow", "mortgage", "loan", "monthly payment", "repay"

→ Annuity:

"Regular deposits", "monthly contributions", "retirement savings", "equal payments"