Bathsheba is saving up for the down payment on a farm. She invests $30000 at 5.2% interest, compounded quarterly, for 4 years. To the nearest tenth of a percent, Bathsheba's rate of return will be ____%.

P = Po(1+r)n

r = (5.2%/4)/100% = 0.013 = Quarterly %
rate expressed as a decimal.

n = 4comp/yr * 4yrs = 16 Compounding
periods.

P = 30,000(1.013)^16 = $36,886.92

((36886.92-30000)/30000) * 100% = 23%
Return rate.

Thank you!

To calculate Bathsheba's rate of return, we can use the formula for compound interest:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

where:
A = the final amount (including principal and interest)
P = the principal amount (the initial investment)
r = interest rate (in decimal form)
n = number of times the interest is compounded per year
t = number of years

In this case, Bathsheba invests $30,000 at an interest rate of 5.2% (or 0.052 as a decimal), compounded quarterly (so n = 4), for 4 years.

Plugging these values into the formula, we have:

A = 30000(1 + 0.052/4)^(4*4)
A ≈ 30000(1 + 0.013)^16
A ≈ 30000(1.013)^16

Using a calculator, we can evaluate (1.013)^16 ≈ 1.21905.

A ≈ 30000 * 1.21905
A ≈ 36571.5

The final amount, including principal and interest, is approximately $36,571.50.

To calculate Bathsheba's rate of return (or rate of interest), we need to find the difference between the final amount and the initial investment, divided by the initial investment:

Rate of return = (A - P) / P * 100%
Rate of return ≈ (36571.5 - 30000) / 30000 * 100%
Rate of return ≈ 0.21905 * 100%
Rate of return ≈ 21.9%

Therefore, Bathsheba's rate of return to the nearest tenth of a percent is approximately 21.9%.