The secret to getting rich

We explain the secret to getting rich using credit cards, mortgages and savings accounts!
It's claimed that Nobel Prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein declared compound interest to be "the most powerful force in the universe" and "the eighth wonder of the world".
Haven't a clue what he meant? Believe it or not, understanding how compound interest works is the secret to getting rich.
What is compound interest?
To answer, I'll first explain simple interest.
With simple interest, the interest you pay on a debt changes only when the interest rate changes. Thus, if I lend you £1,000 at a fixed rate of 5% a year simple, then you pay me a flat £50 a year in interest until you decide to repay the debt in full.
However, with compound interest, this yearly interest is added to your debt, making it larger and, therefore, increasing your interest bill in later years. Here's how the interest bill on a £1,000 debt at a fixed rate of 5% a year compounds over time:
Year |
Start balance |
5% of balance |
End balance |
1 |
£1,000.00 |
£50.00 |
£1,050.00 |
2 |
£1,050.00 |
£52.50 |
£1,102.50 |
3 |
£1,102.50 |
£55.13 |
£1,157.63 |
4 |
£1,157.63 |
£57.88 |
£1,215.51 |
5 |
£1,215.51 |
£60.78 |
£1,276.28 |
6 |
£1,276.28 |
£63.81 |
£1,340.10 |
7 |
£1,340.10 |
£67.00 |
£1,407.10 |
8 |
£1,407.10 |
£70.36 |
£1,477.46 |
9 |
£1,477.46 |
£73.87 |
£1,551.33 |
10 |
£1,551.33 |
£77.57 |
£1,628.89 |
As you can see, compounding happens when interest is added to your debt, making both your balance and subsequent interest bills larger. In effect, you're paying interest, plus interest on interest, plus interest on interest on interest, and so on.
Thus, the yearly interest bill shown above starts off at £50 but reaches almost £78 by year 10. Also, the original debt of £1,000 swells to almost £1,629 after ten years of interest being added to it.
Of course, the above example only shows interest rolling up on a debt. It doesn't show what changes when monthly repayments are made. This is where the maths gets a lot trickier!
Compound interest on repayment mortgages
Most home-buyer mortgages are repayment mortgages - but before I explain how those work, let’s look at the alternative: interest-only mortgages.
With a typical 25-year interest-only mortgage, your monthly repayments exactly match the interest owed, leaving your debt untouched. Hence, you need an investment plan to pay off your loan after 25 years. Thus, your debt is level throughout these 25 years and your repayments vary only in line with the interest rate charged.
With a repayment mortgage, you repay your loan as you go along. Thus, your monthly repayments are made up of interest plus a repayment of the outstanding capital.
However, your debt doesn't reduce in a straight line down to zero, because interest charges are highest in the early years, as you haven’t paid off much of your debt. As your debt reduces, you have less interest to pay each month - but, despite this, your monthly payments stay the same. Thus, a greater proportion of your payments each month can go towards repaying the capital of your debt and not the interest on that debt.
This means you’ll end up paying off your debt more quickly towards the end of your mortgage term than you were in the early years.
It’s like a steam train that is gradually accelerating. And the more you put stoke the engine and fight back against the malign compound interest of your mortgage in the early years, the better off you’ll be. You can do this by making monthly or yearly overpayments, and by throwing the occasional lump sum at your loan.
Even relatively small overpayments, say, £25 a month, can save you thousands of pounds and slice years from your loan's life. Try our mortgage overpayment calculator to see how fast you could kill your home loan. With overpayments, compound interest starts working for you, instead of against you!
Compound interest on credit cards
The problem with credit cards that the interest rates they charge are, quite frankly, a huge rip-off. Although the Bank of England's base rate is a tiny 0.5% a year, a typical credit card charges a yearly interest rate of over 19% APR (Annual Percentage Rate).
My next table shows you how difficult it is -- thanks to compound interest -- to pay off a credit card with a minimum monthly repayment of 2.5% of the balance. This is based on a balance of £2,000 and an APR of 19%:
Month |
Start balance |
Monthly interest at 1.46%* |
Monthly repayment at 2.5% |
End balance |
1 |
£2,000.00 |
£29.20 |
£50.73 |
£1,978.47 |
2 |
£1,978.47 |
£28.89 |
£50.18 |
£1,957.17 |
3 |
£1,957.17 |
£28.57 |
£49.64 |
£1,936.10 |
4 |
£1,936.10 |
£28.27 |
£49.11 |
£1,915.26 |
5 |
£1,915.26 |
£27.96 |
£48.58 |
£1,894.64 |
6 |
£1,894.64 |
£27.66 |
£48.06 |
£1,874.25 |
7 |
£1,874.25 |
£27.36 |
£47.54 |
£1,854.07 |
8 |
£1,854.07 |
£27.07 |
£47.03 |
£1,834.11 |
9 |
£1,834.11 |
£26.78 |
£46.52 |
£1,814.37 |
10 |
£1,814.37 |
£26.49 |
£46.02 |
£1,794.84 |
11 |
£1,794.84 |
£26.20 |
£45.53 |
£1,775.51 |
12 |
£1,775.51 |
£25.92 |
£45.04 |
£1,756.40 |
Totals |
£330.38 |
£573.98 |
* Monthly interest of 1.46% compounds to 19% APR over the course of a year.
As you can see, a card debt of £2,000 reduces to £1,756.40 after one year, which is a fall of £243.60. However, your repayments have totalled £573.98, with the difference (£330.38) made up of interest.
In other words, and just like a mortgage, your credit card repayments consist mostly of interest in the early years. This is why credit cards are such a horrifically expensive way to borrow and why even a small card debt can take decades to repay.
In summary, the combination of sky-high interest rates and compound interest make credit cards a terrible way to borrow money, especially over the long term. Therefore, borrow only what you can afford to repay and strive to pay off any card debts as quickly as you can!
If you already have existing debt on a card charging a high level of interest, you could use a low-interest credit card or loan to pay it off cheaply and quickly. Here’s a table of best buys:
Method of repaying your debt |
APR |
Fee |
0% for 22 months |
2.9% of the balance |
|
0% for 16 months |
1.6% of the balance |
|
6.9% APR for life |
£0 |
|
Sainsbury’s Loans - for shoppers with a Nectar card |
6.2% APR for four to five years |
£0 |
Compound interest on savings
While compound interest is the enemy of borrowers, it is a great friend to savers.
Here's how a savings pot of £2,000 grows over time, thanks to tax-free interest compounding at 4% a year:
Year |
Start balance |
5% of balance |
End balance |
1 |
£1,000.00 |
£40.00 |
£1,040.00 |
2 |
£1,040.00 |
£41.60 |
£1,081.60 |
3 |
£1,081.60 |
£43.26 |
£1,124.86 |
4 |
£1,124.86 |
£44.99 |
£1,169.86 |
5 |
£1,169.86 |
£46.79 |
£1,216.65 |
6 |
£1,216.65 |
£48.67 |
£1,265.32 |
7 |
£1,265.32 |
£50.61 |
£1,315.93 |
8 |
£1,315.93 |
£52.64 |
£1,368.57 |
9 |
£1,368.57 |
£54.74 |
£1,423.31 |
10 |
£1,423.31 |
£56.93 |
£1,480.24 |
As you can see, your 4% interest is only £40 in year one, but rises every year to reach almost £57 in year 10. As a result of interest compounding in this savings account, the balance exceeds £1,480 after 10 years, which is 48% more than the starting balance of £1,000.
This may not look very impressive, but interest rates are very low right now and should rise in future.
In summary, it is far, far better to earn compound interest than to pay it, so please try to get rid of your debts and become a saver as soon as you can!
(Please note that my credit card calculations assume that interest is added on and your repayment taken off at the same time of the month, whereas real credit cards collect repayments weeks after interest is charged. However, this is good enough for this worked example.)
More: Find superior savings accounts | 25 great places to stash your cash | British misery index hits 19-year high
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Comments
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[I]...the obnoxious cretins who kick a bag of wind around...[/I] You missed an important bit out: "...who kick a bag of wind around in front of thousands of ne'erdowells." I have heard before that compound interest is the way to get rich. This is not quite correct. The correct equation is not the Compound Interest Equation, but the Exponential Function. In other words, if you put, say £10,000 into an account at 5% interest, your beard will sweep the ground and you will not be much richer. But if you put a portion of income into your account at regular intervals (If you can increase this income when you can, so much the better), you then have the Exponential Function), that will guarantee you get rich eventually. Obviously, the younger you start, the better. My daughter and I did a survey of rich people - usually famous, but they also included some characters we knew personally. We found that they all had one thing in common. Usually, they did what they did because they loved it, and money was a kind of by-product. But all of these people could - if they so desired - lie in bed all day, and the money would still be coming in. (Something known to anyone who, like myself, languishes on the Nat King Cole.) In other words, these people were getting substantial incomes from residuals, interest, coupons, dividends, royalites, rents, profits etc, And that is the pointer. Instead of buying a car or a television, you sink your money into cash cows. Most people buy tut, and spend their money on drink and football matches; so they will never get rich. The results of an Australian study showed that the richest of the rich only had two things in common. One was high integrity. (So I should be a lot richer than I am). The other was most of them had links of some description with real estate.
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Few would begrudge inventors and risk entrepreneurial risk takers getting rich, but what really annoys is the remuneration of time servers in "top jobs". Not just bankers, but all those whose pay is decided not from their real wealth creation, but by a 'remuneration committee' rolling a dice. There has been a huge inflation of salaries in the highest pay sector. As regards this article, I am quite well off from running a small business, and by not spending much. I simply can't imagine what people earning over 150k p.a. need it for. And it's a bit unseemly when others are finding it hard to get by.
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Why all this bleating about bankers? People tend to become banking executives in order to get rich and take from society, just like doctors and nurses tend to become doctors and nurses to give to society. Exceptions apart, such as Crippen on the one hand and Hintze on the other of course! Society quite likes, respects, and approves of doctors and nurses, and doesn't seem to like bankers, especially after having to give colossal aid to some banks. Me - I just can't think why the name of Bob Diamond isn't up there with the likes of Mother Theresa and Nelson Mandela:-)
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22 January 2013