Basis Point Change Calculator
Calculate the change between two rates in basis points.
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bps
Formula
Change (bps) = (New Rate - Old Rate) × 100 To find the change in basis points, subtract the old rate from the new rate (both in percentage), then multiply by 100 to convert to basis points.
Common Rate Changes
| Old Rate | New Rate | Change (bps) | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.00% | 5.25% | +25 bps | ↑ Increase |
| 4.50% | 5.00% | +50 bps | ↑ Increase |
| 3.75% | 4.00% | +25 bps | ↑ Increase |
| 5.50% | 5.25% | -25 bps | ↓ Decrease |
| 6.00% | 5.50% | -50 bps | ↓ Decrease |
| 4.25% | 3.50% | -75 bps | ↓ Decrease |
When to Use This Calculator
- Tracking Federal Reserve or central bank interest rate decisions
- Comparing mortgage rate changes over time
- Analyzing bond yield movements
- Evaluating changes in investment fund expense ratios
Часто задаваемые вопросы
How do I calculate basis point change?
Subtract the old rate from the new rate, then multiply by 100. For example, if the rate changed from 3.50% to 3.75%, the change is (3.75 - 3.50) × 100 = 25 basis points.
What does a 25 basis point increase mean?
A 25 basis point increase means the rate went up by 0.25 percentage points. For example, from 5.00% to 5.25%.
How do central banks use basis points?
Central banks often adjust interest rates in increments of 25 or 50 basis points (0.25% or 0.50%) to manage inflation and economic growth.