In finance, accrued interest is the interest that has accumulated since the principal investment, or since the previous interest payment if there has been one already. For a financial instrument such as a bond, interest is calculated and paid in set intervals.
[edit] FormulaThe primary formula for calculating the interest accrued in a given period is:
where IA is the accrued interest, T is the fraction of the year, P is the principal, and R is the annualized interest rate. T is calculated as follows:
where DP is the number of days in the period, and DY is the number of days in the year. A compounding instrument adds the previously accrued interest to the principal each period. The main variables that affect the calculation are the period between interest payments and the day count convention used to determine the fraction of year, and the date rolling convention in use.. [edit] Day count conventionsCommon day count conventions that affect the accrued interest calculation are:
Each month is treated normally and the year is assumed to be 360 days e.g. in a period from February 1, 2005 to April 1, 2005 T is considered to be 59 days divided by 360.
Each month is treated as having 30 days, so a period from February 1, 2005 to April 1, 2005 is considered to be 60 days. The year is considered to have 360 days. This convention is frequently chosen for ease of calculation: the payments tend to be regular and at predictable amounts.
Each month is treated normally, and the year is assumed to have 365 days, regardless of leap year status. For example, a period from February 1, 2005 to April 1, 2005 is considered to be 59 days. This convention results in periods having slightly different lengths.
Each month is treated normally, and the year has the usual number of days. For example, a period from February 1, 2005 to April 1, 2005 is considered to be 59 days. In this convention leap years do affect the final result.
Each month is treated normally, and the year is the number of days in the current coupon period multiplied by the number of coupons in a year e.g. if the coupon is payable 1 February and August then on April 1, 2005 the days in the year is 362 i.e. 181 (the number of days between 1 February and 1 August 2005) x 2 (semi-annual). [edit] Date rollingDate rolling comes into effect because many instruments can only pay out accrued interest on business days. This often results in interest accruing for a slightly shorter or longer period. Common date rolling conventions are:
[edit] See also[edit] References[edit] External links
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