I thought it was the rule of 72.
Anyway by the "rule of 70" it would clearly take 7 years.
You multiply the time by the rate
actual time:
2 = 1.1^n
log2 = nlog 1.1
n = log2/log1.1 = 7.27
the rule of 72 would have given an answer of 72/10 = 7.2 , a bit closer to the real answer.
#2, amount = 9000(1.0175)^40 = .....
I see the correct answer in your list
You are looking for an account to invest your $9,000 in. You want to know how many years it will take to double if the account you are putting it into gets 10% APR. Using the Rule of 70, how many years should you be expecting to leave it sit?
7 years
10 years
18 years
You take $9,000 and place it into an account that compounds quarterly (4 times a year) at 7% for 10 years. What is the account going to be worth at the end of that time? Round to the nearest penny.
$16,201.83
$15,300.00
$18,014.38
1 answer