Annual Return

  

Categories: Stocks, Managed Funds

Annual return is simply what you get back from your investment each year. It's the whole enchilada of what your investment makes you (or costs you), including capital gains or losses and interest or dividends.

You owned Smooshem Ketchup Company last year on January 1. The stock traded at $50 a share. By the next New Year's Eve, the stock was trading for $55. But it also paid $2 in dividends through the year. Its annual return, in simple terms (i.e., not worrying about the time value of dividends paid at different times of the year) was $7 total from a base of $50 or 7 / 50 = 14%.

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Finance: What is an Annualized Return?36 Views

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Finance, a la shmoop. What is an annualized return? Alright people, well

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when you invest a dollar you hope or even expect to get more than a dollar [ATM machine]

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back, at some point. And let's say you invested that dollar in Terminators

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Closet -a leading dealer in cybernetic body enhancements. And it went from $1 a

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share to a dollar ten six months later. Alright, nice return.

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You made 10% in just six months but in most investing discussions ,investment [spreadsheet shown]

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returns are discussed in the form of annual returns, not monthly or daily or

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biannual numbers, so you need to convert your six-month return into an annualized [angelic glow]

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one, and you can do the process here of computing that number that is if you made

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10% in six months well then in a year presumably you could notion that you'd

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have made 20%. It's not that you would have guaranteedly made 20% it's just [spreadsheet shown]

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the math saying that well if you had compounded at that rate then you'd have

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made 20%, so what if she made 10% in a month? Well the stock went from a buck a

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share Jan 1 to a buck ten a share by Feb 1 .Well if you impute so that you can [calendar shown]

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compute that month's gain of 10% would carry a compound rate of a hundred

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twenty percent. Right ? You're multiplying 12 months times 10 there, that'd be

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annualizing it meaning, that at that rate you are more than doubling your money on [spreadsheet shown]

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an annualized return basis. And that's more than enough dough to keep

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terminators closet popping out those Wi-Fi enabled contact lenses faster than [woman watches TV]

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people can wear them.

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