3

I'm taking a finance course at a Canadian university. The teacher said this time-of-money is how the banks calculate their loans and mortgages. Out of the blue, I want to try how close the formula in school match up to the real world. Here's my scenario:

Borrow $300,000 at 3% interest, to be paid over 25 years. By law, the interest is compounded twice per year. Payment is to be made bi-weekly (26 payments per year). How much is the bi-weekly payment?

My calculation

I first calculate the periodic interest rate:

r = (1 + 0.03 / 2) ^ (2/26) - 1 = 0.001145934...

Then plug everything into Excel:

=PMT(r, 650, 300000)

The result is $654.83.

Bank's calculation

I then go to TD Bank's mortgage calculator and plug in the parameters. The result is $652.90 (see pics below).

TD Mortgage calculator

Question

How did the bank come up with their number? What did I do wrong?

2
  • 1
    There are slightly more than 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. 26 * 14 = 364.
    – Nayuki
    Commented Jan 5, 2020 at 19:14
  • 1
    @Nayuki Sounds like an answer to me. Commented Jan 6, 2020 at 18:35

1 Answer 1

1

As Nayuki points out you have too few days per year as 14 x 26 = 364 meaning you miss 1 day per year.

This results in two errors in your calculation

  1. Your rate is a little too big, should be 0.001143 by using this formula (1 + 0.03 / 2)^(14 / (365/2)) - 1
  2. You have too few periods as you use 26 payments x 25 years = 650, which should have been (365/14) x 25 = 651.8 ~ 652 payments

Solving for these to errors will fix your payment to match TD Banks calculations. This is also clear if you look at the ‘amortization plan’ in the calculator.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .