Making Mathematical Sense of Your Personal Finances /
First Statement of Responsibility
by Morton D. Davis.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
New York, NY :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Imprint: Copernicus,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2001.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
1 Investment Strategies -- 2 Interest -- 3 Bonds -- 4 Mortgages -- 5 Retirement -- 6 The Psychology of Investing -- 7 A Mathematical Miscellany -- 8 Statistics -- 9 Options -- Appendix Test Your Intuition: Answers.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Learn how to calculate the math behind your mortgage, the interest rate on your credit cards, the risks youre taking on the stock market... Making the right decisions about day-to-day finances can be tricky, in large part because the math involved can be just as tricky as the decisions themselves. In a clear and conversational manner, Morton D. Davis describves the equations behind: Mortgages: Did you know that often 15 years of payments on a 30-year mortgage are mostly paxing off interest, not the loan itself? Stocks: Calculating investor psychology is important. Stcoks have no greater worth than how much people are willing to pay for them. Interest Rates: How does compound interest work mathematically? You might guess that a loan shark who asks for 5 percent interest on a one-week loan is charging 260 percent interest per year. Using compound interest, you can show the actual interest rate is more than four times that! Retirement Funds: How do I save enough money - and keep it - to last for the rest of my life? Social Security: Does it make sense to delay my payments? Using entertaining quizzes that test your intuition, easy-to-understand examples, and illustrative tables, The Math of Money explains how to calculate, and truly understand, your financial picture.