Glossary

Compound Interest

Compound interest is interest earned on both your original principal and on previously accumulated interest. It's the mechanism that makes invested money grow exponentially over time.

Why it matters

Compound interest is the single most powerful force in personal finance — it rewards starting early more than investing large amounts later. The difference between starting to invest at 25 vs. 35 can mean hundreds of thousands of dollars by retirement, even with identical monthly contributions.

Example

$10,000 invested at 7% annual return grows to $19,672 in 10 years and $38,697 in 20 years — nearly quadrupling without adding a single dollar.

How Ray helps

Ray can project the future value of your current savings and investment accounts using compound growth assumptions. Try to see how compounding works on your actual balances.

Terminal
$ ray "if I keep saving at this rate, what will I have in 20 years?"

Related terms

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