"DRB" wrote:
> If I want to calculate a mortgage payment with Canadian
> semi-annual compounding I can't use the built in functions.
I believe you can, if you know how. I am not familiar with
Canadian mortgages, but based on one Canadian mortgage
calculator [1], I believe the following would work using normal
worksheet functions.
Example: 25yr loan of $130,000 at 4.89%. The monthly
payment ($747.97) can be computed as follows:
=PMT(RATE(6,,-1,1+4.89%/2),25*12,-130000)
Explanation: Apparently, the monthly interest rate is the
compounded rate that equals the semi-annual rate, defined
as the annual rate divided by two.
I cannot say with impunity that is correct because I have
found ambiguous explanations of Canadian mortgage rates.
But I ***-u-me that a Canadian lender's calculator does the
right thing. I also note that the above formula is equivalent
to another formula offered by www.exceltip.com [2].
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[1] http://www.canequity.com/mortgage-calculator
[2]
http://www.exceltip.com/st/Calculati...ents/1129.html
Note that (4.89%/2 + 1)^(2/12) - 1 is mathematically the
same as RATE(6,,-1,1+4.89%/2), and the numerical results
are the same to 12 significant digits in this example.
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