Respuesta :
We are not told how often the interest is compounded, so assuming it is compounded yearly, you need to keep $9.99 in the account to pay the fee.
Explanation:
Compound interest follows the formula A=p(1+r)^t,
where:
A is the total amount in the account,
p is the amount of principal,
r is the interest rate as a decimal number,
and t is the number of years.
For our problem:
A = 9.99,
p is unknown,
r = 0.018% = 0.00018,
and t=1.
This gives us:
9.99=p(1+0.00018)^1;
9.99=p(1.00018).
Divide both sides by 1.00018:
9.99=p.
Explanation:
Compound interest follows the formula A=p(1+r)^t,
where:
A is the total amount in the account,
p is the amount of principal,
r is the interest rate as a decimal number,
and t is the number of years.
For our problem:
A = 9.99,
p is unknown,
r = 0.018% = 0.00018,
and t=1.
This gives us:
9.99=p(1+0.00018)^1;
9.99=p(1.00018).
Divide both sides by 1.00018:
9.99=p.
The correct answer is:
$9.99
Explanation:
The formula for compound interest is
[tex] A=p(1+r)^t [/tex], where A is the total amount, p is the principal invested, r is the interest rate as a decimal number, and t is the number of years. In our problem, A is 9.99 (enough to cover the fee); p is unknown; r is 0.018% = 0.018/100 = 0.00018; and t is 1:
[tex] 9.99=p(1+0.00018)^1
\\
\\9.99=p(1.00018)^1
\\
\\9.99=p(1.00018)
\\
\\\frac{9.99}{1.00018}=\frac{p(1.00018)}{1.00018}
\\
\\9.99=p [/tex]