Bond Current Yield Calculator
Compute the current yield on a bond, defined as the annual coupon income divided by the current market price (does not a...
Compute the current yield on a bond, defined as the annual coupon income divided by the current market price (does not a...
Given a balance, APR, and your monthly payment, see how many months until the card is paid off and how much interest you...
Compute the receivables (accounts-receivable) turnover ratio = credit sales / average accounts receivable, and the resul...
Compute the stock price at which a margin call is triggered, given the purchase price, the initial margin requirement, a...
Compute the future value at year 5 of five end-of-year deposits of different sizes, each compounded forward at the chose...
Convert between common electric charge units including coulombs, milli- and microcoulombs, milliampere-hours, and ampere...
Compute how much annual income a retirement portfolio can support at a chosen safe withdrawal rate (commonly 4%).
Compute the debt-service coverage ratio used in commercial real-estate lending: net operating income (NOI) divided by to...
Compute the Macaulay duration — the price-weighted average time to receive cash flows — for a level-coupon bond using th...
Calculates electric motor output shaft power, efficiency, and heat losses from input voltage, current, power factor, and...
Compute a stock's earnings yield as the inverse of its P/E ratio: yield % = EPS / price × 100. Allows direct comparison...
Compute the dividend payout ratio of a company — the percent of net income returned to shareholders as dividends — from...
Needs, wants, and savings at 50/30/20 is a starting point — not a rulebook. Here is how to adapt it when your life doesn't fit neatly into t...
A calm, jargon-free walkthrough of what actually drives your monthly mortgage payment — and how to make the number smaller.
We pulled usage data across our 30 most-visited calculators to understand how readers actually use consumer finance tools. Findings, caveats...
The same $250 a month looks unremarkable for a decade and then suddenly dominates the chart. Here is why compounding behaves that way.