Home > Investing basics: ABCs of investing > Risk & return > Factors affecting return
   
Risk & Return
1. Risk & return
2. Understanding return
3. Factors affecting return
4. Real return
5. Understanding risk
6. Systemic risk
7. Volatility & risk
8. Risk tolerance
 
INVESTOR TOOLKIT
Dictionary
Calculators & Worksheets
Games & Quizzes
Market Research
Email a Friend

Factors affecting return

If you invest at different times, as most people do, you also need to know your investments' annual percent return to measure one performance against another. To find that figure, you divide the total return from the date of purchase by the amount you invested, to calculate the percentage return. Then you divide the percentage return by the number of years you owned the investment. If you invested $10,000 three years ago, and the total return to date is $2,650, your annualized percent return is 8.83 ($2,650 ÷ $10,000 = 0.2649 ÷ 3 = 0.0883).

When you buy and sell also affects your return. If you buy a stock just before its price jumps, the total return will be stronger than if you bought after the price stabilized or before it began to drop. That's one reason your results on a mutual fund investment may be different from the total return reported for that fund in the financial press or in fund materials.

Taxes also affect return. The total return on a municipal bond may be lower than the total return on a corporate bond, but if you owe no tax on the municipal bond income, it may end up making you more money.





 


         
   
BACK  

 

 
Copyright | Contact Us | Link to Us | About Us | Partners | Privacy | Site Map