Some Calculators

May 26, 2008 · 5 comments

1. Corpus Calculator

What it Does :
This Calculator will give let you calculate, how much money you can build up by investing a fixed amount every year for certain years and then leaving that grown amount for another some years.

Example : If i invest Rs 50,000 per year for 10 continous years in something which gives a return of 20% annually and then leave that grown money for another 10 years at return 15% , How much it will grow upto ?


Investment every year of
for years
at interest/pa
then leave for years
to grow at interest/pa


2. Compounded Money Calculator

What it Does : If you invest certain amount one time and let it grow for some years at some interest rate annually , it will give you the total amount at the end.

Example : If you invest 1,00,000 in a mutual fund for 10 years which gives 30% annual return (CAGR) , the amount will grow to 13,78,585


One time investment
for years
at interest/pa

Portfolio Builder

Investment every year
for years
Risk Tolerance
Involvement
Your Financial markets Knowledge
EQUITY
DEBT
GOLD


I would be happy to read your comments or disagreement on any topic. Please leave a comment.

Hope you like this …

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Anonymous April 18, 2009 at 1:57 am

I do not understand on which formula are you using for portfolio building. Looking at the scripting beneath didn’t help much.

I have developed some financial acumen recently after some years of working n ignoring personal finance. Have started building my portfolio but currently it is highly debt oriented and my SIPs in MF are trying to build the gap but it will take 10 years to make the ratio 70:30 (E:D). Wise suggestion on how to balance this skewed ratio… breaking debt is not an option as it is long term investment.

Reply

2 Anonymous April 18, 2009 at 1:58 am

read it bridge the gap :)

Reply

3 Manish Chauhan April 18, 2009 at 2:33 am

@Ananymous

For the second clculator , i am using compound interest formula .

for the first one , I am using both compound intertest and Annuity formula .

Manish

Reply

4 raju January 21, 2010 at 12:10 pm

Dear Manish,

You seem to invest a lot of time on this blog. Just interested in knowing about your profession.
Are employed or do share tradin/advise on financial planning aspects, if yes what are the charges for trading/advice. About me – have recently quit my job, since the company desired that I leave Delhi and join their office in Bhopal, however due to family circumstances I decided to quit instead of taking the promotion with transfer.

Reply

5 manish January 21, 2010 at 4:19 pm

Raju

I mailed you

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