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Investment % increases compared to Bank accounts

Hi,

Quick question (excuse my ignorance):
When you read about a funds performance, say over the last 3 years and it says it is up by 15% is that as a total amount from the start amount?

Only because when you talk about a bank accounts fixed rate for 3 years and it is 4% this is the amount increase each year.

Is this right? And as such does it affect what total increase price you have to be looking at for a fund over 3 years in order to beat the fixed rate account?

Thanks

Comments

  • G_M
    G_M Posts: 51,977 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    tresco851 wrote: »
    Hi,

    Quick question (excuse my ignorance):
    When you read about a funds performance, say over the last 3 years and it says it is up by 15% is that as a total amount from the start amount?
    Yes, but be careful that it might not exclude costs/fees - it might just be the fund's underlying performance. Read the small print.

    Only because when you talk about a bank accounts fixed rate for 3 years and it is 4% this is the amount increase each year.
    Yes - the 4% is (probobly) the AER (annual rate)

    Is this right? And as such does it affect what total increase price you have to be looking at for a fund over 3 years in order to beat the fixed rate account?
    Correct.

    Thanks

    And remember just because the fund went up 15% in the last 3 years that means nothing in relation to what it will do in the next 3 years!
  • Reaper
    Reaper Posts: 7,356 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    A bank account that adds the interest to your account on a monthly/yearly basis will benefit from compounding so after 3 years you would get a bit more than you expected.

    If they say a fund has gone up by 15% over 3 years they mean exactly that, there is no compounding.

    One thing to note though is dividends. Usually there are 2 versions of the fund, one pays out dividends to you, the other re-invests them (known as an Accumulation fund). Obviously the one that reinvests them will grow faster than the one that doesn't.
  • Thanks both of you. I'm on to all the fees and small print so hopefully I'll know exactly what is what before anything goes ahead.
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