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rate of return |
Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
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Rate of return Calculated as the (value nowminus value at time of purchase) divided by value at time of purchase. For equities, we often include dividends with the value now. See also: Return, annual rate of return.
Rate of Return In securities, the amount of revenue an investment generates as a percentage of the amount of capital invested over a given period of time. The rate of return shows the amount of time it will take to recover one's investment. For example, if one invests $1,000 and receives $150 in the first year of the investment, the rate of return is 15%, and the investor will recover his/her initial $1,000 in six years and eight months. Different investors have different required rates of return at different levels of risk. Rate of return. Rate of return is income you collect on an investment expressed as a percentage of the investment's purchase price. With a common stock, the rate of return is dividend yield, or your annual dividend divided by the price you paid for the stock. However, the term is also used to mean percentage return, which is a stock's total return -- dividend plus change in value -- divided by the investment amount. With a bond, rate of return is the current yield, or your annual interest income divided by the price you paid for the bond. For example, if you paid $900 for a bond with a par value of $1,000 that pays 6% interest, your rate of return is $60 divided by $900, or 6.67%. rate of return The ratio between the earnings and the cost of an investment.How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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This was a very lucrative, and wonderful concept during the 1990s when equity markets were returning 15% compound rate of return each year. McCown stated, "Anyone who saw the potential and bought at the end of 2001 was rewarded with appreciation of 61% in 2002, 158% in 2003 and 72% in 2004 for a three-year compound rate of return of 93% per year. Since its founding, Venrock has produced a compound rate of return in excess of 35% - placing it among a small number of premier firms that have achieved consistently superior performance. |
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