I believe that this is probably the industry standard in generating Am schedules. At least, all of the CPAs I have met use it.
Yes, you can also use excel as a financial calc. Excel is very useful in analyzing deals. I don’t currently know of a piece of SW that is really excellent at the analization portion of investing. It seems that a lot of guru’s have attempted to create something, but I have not seen anything that I would recommend.
Posted by JPiper on November 26, 2000 at 14:24:18:
TValue as mentioned below is a good piece of software for amortization schedules. But for “tracking” I assume you want more than just an amortization schedule.
Tracking is best accomplished by an accounting program like QuickBooks. Notesmith is a good piece of software for handling notes…the data can then be exported to QuickBooks.