15.2.1 Definitions and Formulas

Principal
The amount of money initially invested or borrowed; it is the basis for computing the interest for the investment or loan.
Simple interest
Simple interest is a way of computing the value of an investment based on giving interest one time only: at the very end of the investment period.
Compound interest
Compound interest involves breaking the lifetime of the loan or investment into many periods. During one period, simple interest is used to compute the value of the loan or investment. During the next period, the interest for that is based not on the original principal, but on the current value of the loan including all interest from previous periods. Thus, with compound interest, you earn interest on your interest.
Continuously compounded interest
This is a form of compound interest that uses, essentially, an infinite number of infinitesimally short investment periods for computing the interest. When this is done, we find that the exponential function with base e is a natural way to express the investment value.