Forecasting the Future Value of Your Roth-IRA or Roth-401(k)

Curious about how much money you’ll accumulate in your Roth retirement account?
If you’ve got Microsoft Excel (or just about any other popular spreadsheet program) running on your computer, you can use its FV function to forecast the value of your Roth IRA or Roth 401(k).
The FV function calculates the future value of an investment given its interest rate, the number of payments, of the investment, and, optionally, the type-of-annuity switch. (More about the type-of-annuity switch a little later.)
The function uses the following syntax:
=FV(rate,nper,pmt,pv,type)
This little pretty
To calculate the future value of the
=FV(10%/12,25*12,-400,-20000,0)
The function returns the value 771872.26—roughly $772,000 dollars.
A handful of To convert the 10% annual interest to a monthly interest rate, the formula divides the annual interest rate by 12. Similarly, to convert the 25-year term
Also, notice that the monthly payment and initial present values show as negative amounts because they represent function returns the future value amount as a positive value because it reflects a cash inflow you ultimately receive.
That 0 at the end of the is the type-of-annuity switch. If you set the type-of-annuity switch to 1, Excel assumes payments occur at the beginning of the period (month in this case),
Теги: investment