by Credit Card Guy on Fri Dec 07, 2007 3:09 pm
1) Annual Percentage Rate, or APR, is a measure of how much interest will be on an annual basis without taking into account compound interest.
2) Annual Percentage Yield, or APY, is the same interest rate measure, but accounts for compound interest - a better measure of how much you will actually pay in interest. Banks and credit card issuers often express credit card interest rates in APR, in order to better hide just how much interest would cost.
Fortunately, calculating APY is a relatively simply matter, as is APR. Here are some examples so that you can calculate APR versus APY:
* APR = Period Rate x Periods per Year
Let's say a credit card company offers a 13% interest rate, and they express that rate in terms of APR with a monthly billing cycle.
* 13% = Period Rate x 12
* The Period Rate is 13%/12, or 1.083% per month.
* APY = (1 + Period Rate) ^Periods Per Year - 1
* APY = (1 + 0.01083)^12 -1
* APY = 13.8%
That extra 0.8% makes a difference in how much you pay each month. How much of a difference? Compare the payments on a $1,000 balance over the span of a year. Assuming you carry the balance consistently, you'd pay $130 in interest on a 13% APR but $138 in interest on a 13% APY.
Likewise, banks will publish the APY on an investment option (like a Certificate of Deposit, or CD) to make it look better than it is. Take a 4.5% APY CD from a bank. This looks like a very competitive, high savings rate, doesn't it? Let's break it down with some high school algebra:
* 4.5% = (1+Period Rate)^12 -1
* 4.5% + 1 = (1+Period Rate)^12
* ((4.5% + 1)^(1/12))-1 = Period Rate
* Recalling APR = Period Rate x Periods (in this case, 12): 4.4% APR
In this case, you're not getting the interest rate you thought you were based on an advertisement. If you were comparing this to, say, a 1 year Treasury note, and the note had a 4.45% APR, you could have purchased the higher APY CD without knowing you would have made less money by the end of the year!