I buy a bond fund and it adds to the principal with monthly dividends so then next month dividend is based on the higher principal.
or I buy a 1 year corporate bond that pays yearly so I only get one payment.
What's better? Is there a calculator that compares x% calculated monthly compared to x% calculated yearly?
I'm thinking a fund that pays monthly you'd be better off but what's the percentage that makes a difference?
Am I on the right rack or missing something.
Comments
$100,000 5% monthly 1 year $5116 interest
$100,000 5% yearly 1 year $5000 interest
$100,000 5% monthly 5 year $28336 interest
$100,000 5% yearly 5 year $27628 interest
so it makes a difference but I'm looking for x% yearly is better than x% monthly.
Individual zero-coupon bonds do have built-in reinvestments at interest rate determined at the time of purchase and if held to maturity.
Annual simple 6% will make $100 into $106 in 1 year, $172 in 10 years.
If compounded monthly, $100 will become $106.17 in 1 year, $181.94 in 10 years. So, compounding matters over long times.