Hi All,
We're told that Kevin made two investments:
1) $8,000 for one year at a simple annual interest rate of 6 percent
2) $10,000 for one year at an annual interest rate of 8 percent compounded semiannually.
We're asked for the total amount of interest that Kevin earned on the two investments. This question requires that we use the two interest formulas:
Simple Interest = Principal x (1+rt)
Compound Interest = Principal x (1+r)^t
Where r and t are the interest rate/year and the amount of time (in years).
The first investment = $8,000(1.06) = $8,480 --> $480 in interest
The second investment calculates the interest SEMI-ANNUALLY, so we have to double the value of t, but halve the value of r....
The second investment = $10,000(1.04)^2
While that calculation might look a bit 'complex', we don't actually have to complete it. The first interest payment would equal $400 (since that is 4% of $10,000), but the second payment would be slightly HIGHER (since we'd be taking 4% of $10,400).
Thus, the TOTAL interest would equal $480 + $400 + (a little more than $400) = More than $1280. There's only one answer that matches...
Final Answer:
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich