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Can some please explain this question in an easier way? Thanks in advance
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KarishmaB Would you like to discuss this question ?
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Bunuel How do you infer that the highlighted part can be more than 50 or less than 50 , depending on the value of P ? WHats the logic behind this ? 

Angela borrowed P dollars at 6 percent annual interest compounded monthly, and she will repay the loan by making n monthly payments of M dollars each. The formula gives the relationship between P, M and n. Is M > 50?[/b]

If we filter the question and remove all extraneous information, the question boils down to whether \(P * \frac{(0.005)(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1} > 50\).

(1) P = 10,000

Substituting this value into the question, we'd get:

    Is \(10,000 *\frac{(0.005)(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1} > 50\)?

    Is \(50 *\frac{(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1} > 50\)?

    Is \(\frac{(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1} > 1\)?

    Is \((1.005)^n>(1.005)^n - 1\)?

    Is \(0> - 1\)?

Since the answer to the above question is YES, then this statement is sufficient.

(2) n = 48­

Substituting this value into the question, we'd get:

    Is \(P *\frac{(0.005)(1.005)^{48}}{(1.005)^{48} - 1 } > 50\)?­

\(P * \frac{(0.005)(1.005)^{48}}{(1.005)^{48} - 1}\) can be more than (or equal to) 50 as well as less than 50, depending on the value of P. Hence, this statement is not sufficient.

Answer: A.­
­
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Bunuel How do you infer that the highlighted part can be more than 50 or less than 50 , depending on the value of P ? WHats the logic behind this ? 

\(P * \frac{(0.005)(1.005)^{48}}{(1.005)^{48} - 1}\) can be more than (or equal to) 50 as well as less than 50, depending on the value of P. Hence, this statement is not sufficient.

Answer: A.­
­
­
The logic is very simple actually. Try substituting a very small value, close to 0, for P and a very large value, say 10^100, for P.­
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\(M = P *\frac{(0.005)(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1}\)

Angela borrowed P dollars at 6 percent annual interest compounded monthly, and she will repay the loan by making n monthly payments of M dollars each. The formula gives the relationship between P, M and n. Is M > 50?

(1) P = 10,000
(2) n = 48

First impression: Easy C which means it is likely sufficient using a single statement. Now the question is - which statement alone is sufficient?

Note the question stem asks for not the value of M but whether M > 50. So less info could be sufficient to answer it.

\(M = P *\frac{(0.005)(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1}\)

Whether the monthly payment is more than 50 or less than 50 must depend on the amount borrowed. What if Angela borrowed only $10? Then her monthly payment cannot be greater than $50. Any reasonable amount will lead to M > 50. So we certainly need statement 1. Statement 2 alone cannot be sufficient.

Now we need to evaluate whether statement 1 alone is sufficient or we need statement 2 too. Do we need the value of n if we know that P = 10,000?

If n = 1 (we repay in one go), we get M = P * 1.005 in the given formula. Since P = 10,000, this value is certainly greater than 50.
If n is a very large number, then (1.005)^n is approximately the same as (1.005)^n - 1 and hence we get M = P * .005
Since P = 10,000, we get M = 50. Since the denominator (1.005)^n - 1 is slightly smaller than (1.005)^n, we know that M will be slightly greater than 50 in this case.

Hence no matter what the value of n (from 1 to a very very large value), M will always be greater than 50. So statement 1 is sufficient alone.

Answer (A)
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Not sure if my logic would hold true in all problems but since this is compounded monthly I just did the simple annual interest at a 6% rate.

for 1)

10,000 * 6% = 600 / 12 = 50

so if it is compounded more frequently it would be above $50.

for 2)

without knowing the P you cant determine this
KarmaTheCat
\(M = P *\frac{(0.005)(1.005)^n}{(1.005)^n - 1}\)

Angela borrowed P dollars at 6 percent annual interest compounded monthly, and she will repay the loan by making n monthly payments of M dollars each. The formula gives the relationship between P, M and n. Is M > 50?

(1) P = 10,000
(2) n = 48
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