A check-cashing store is in the business of making personal loans to walk-up customers. The store makes
Question:
A check-cashing store is in the business of making personal loans to walk-up customers. The store makes only one-week loans at 6.8 percent interest per week.
a. What APR must the store report to its customers? What EAR are customers actually paying?
b. Now suppose the store makes one-week loans at 6.8 percent discount interest per week (see Problem 60). What’s the APR now? The EAR?
c. The check-cashing store also makes one-month add-on interest loans at 6.8 percent discount interest per week. Thus if you borrow $100 for one month (four weeks), the interest will be ($100 × 1.0684) − 100 = $30.10. Because this is discount interest, your net loan proceeds today will be $69.90. You must then repay the store $100 at the end of the month. To help you out, though, the store lets you pay off this $100 in installments of $25 per week. What is the APR of this loan? What is the EAR?
Step by Step Answer:
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance
ISBN: 978-1260153590
12th edition
Authors: Stephen M. Ross, Randolph W Westerfield, Robert R. Dockson, Bradford D Jordan