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Investing with compound interest can help double or triple your savings. Here’s how

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Compound interest — it’s either the easiest way to double or even triple your savings, or a sure-fire ticket to bankruptcy.

Compound interest is different from simple interest. Simple interest is a fixed rate over time, based on the initial amount you’ve invested.

To understand simple interest, let’s assume you deposit $100 into an account with a 5 percent interest rate. Multiply your principal by the interest rate, and then the amount of time you expect to keep that money in the account.

One hundred dollars times 5 percent, or 0.05, is $5. Keep that account going for 50 years, and you’ll earn $250 in interest, for a grand total of $350.

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Compound interest is different. It’s interest on top of interest. If you use it correctly, you can turn small initial investments into small fortunes.

Let’s take that same $100 from the first example, and the same 5 percent interest rate. If that interest rate compounds each year, your $100 would turn into $1,146 at the end of 50 years. If you matched your initial investment of $100 each month, without changing anything, you’d end up with $252,364 after 50 years.

Compound interest can be great for investing your money, but if you are looking for a loan, it could easily let your debt grow out of control. The same compound interest used to make your investments grow exponentially over time, can also be applied to your unpaid balance on certain loans.

Check out the video to learn more about compound interest.

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