How much would [tex]$\$[/tex]200[tex]$ invested at $[/tex]6 \%$ interest compounded annually be worth after 6 years? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

[tex]\[
A(t) = P\left(1+\frac{r}{n}\right)^{nt}
\][/tex]



Answer :

To determine how much \[tex]$200 invested at 6% interest compounded annually will be worth after 6 years, we can use the compound interest formula given: \[ A(t) = P \left(1 + \frac{r}{n} \right)^{n t} \] where: - \(P\) is the initial principal balance (\$[/tex]200),
- [tex]\(r\)[/tex] is the annual interest rate (6% or 0.06),
- [tex]\(n\)[/tex] is the number of times interest is compounded per year (annually, so [tex]\(n = 1\)[/tex]),
- [tex]\(t\)[/tex] is the number of years the money is invested (6 years).

Let's substitute these values into the formula:

[tex]\[ A(t) = 200 \left(1 + \frac{0.06}{1} \right)^{1 \cdot 6} \][/tex]

Simplify the expressions inside the parentheses and the exponent:

[tex]\[ A(t) = 200 \left(1 + 0.06 \right)^6 \][/tex]
[tex]\[ A(t) = 200 \left(1.06 \right)^6 \][/tex]

Now we calculate [tex]\(1.06^6\)[/tex]:

[tex]\[ 1.06^6 \approx 1.418519 \][/tex]

Then multiply by the initial principal:

[tex]\[ A(t) \approx 200 \times 1.418519 \][/tex]
[tex]\[ A(t) \approx 283.703822 \][/tex]

Thus, the exact amount after 6 years is approximately \[tex]$283.703822. When rounding this to the nearest cent, we consider the digit in the third decimal place: \[ 283.70_3\ldots \approx 283.70 \] So, to the nearest cent, the investment will be worth \$[/tex]283.70 after 6 years.