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Equity Performance Figures
capital0ne
Posts: 872 Forumite
Now that Bowler has explained perfomance figures and their calculation in fantastic detail - cheers mate!
Can I have some discussion on the performance figures from different sites.
City of London Ord : CTY
https://www.ii.co.uk
1m 1y 3y 5y
+2.85% +6.99% +28.16% +34.50%
http://tools.morningstar.co.uk/
1m 1y 3y ann 5y ann
+2.85 +6.99 +8.62 +6.11
https://www.hl.co.uk/
1m 1y 3y 5y
+3.23% +3.75% +12.31% +9.59%
I can understand the ii and morningstar figures for 1m and 1y - it's not annualised, but I can't follow any of the other figures, or why Hargreaves is completely different.
TIA
Can I have some discussion on the performance figures from different sites.
City of London Ord : CTY
https://www.ii.co.uk
1m 1y 3y 5y
+2.85% +6.99% +28.16% +34.50%
http://tools.morningstar.co.uk/
1m 1y 3y ann 5y ann
+2.85 +6.99 +8.62 +6.11
https://www.hl.co.uk/
1m 1y 3y 5y
+3.23% +3.75% +12.31% +9.59%
I can understand the ii and morningstar figures for 1m and 1y - it's not annualised, but I can't follow any of the other figures, or why Hargreaves is completely different.
TIA
0
Comments
-
At Morningstar the 3 year "ann" figure means the total return over the three year period works out to 8.82 annualised. So the 8.82% is an annual figure, not the total figure. If you received that rate of return for three years in a row with all the returns left reinvested and compounded up, you would end up after three years with a total profit of 28.16%. Which agrees with what ii.co.uk told you the fund delivered after three years in total.
So the 3 and 5 years figures at Morningstar are annual average compounding returns, white the 3 and 5 years figures at ii co.uk are total returns over the period. If you are trying to compare a fund's performance against other funds' published data, you might prefer to be told the annualised return over a period, or the total return for the period, depending what format the rest of your data is in.
The Morningstar (5 year ann) figure means it gave an annualised return of 6.11% over 5 years.
What happens if you invest some money and grow it by an annual return of 6.11% five times in a row?
£10,000 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 = about £13,450.
Same as if you got a total return of 34.5% (10,000 x 1.345 = £13,450).
So, Morningstar and ii are wholly consistent, just presenting the same performance in a different format.0 -
capital0ne wrote: »or why Hargreaves is completely different.
For ITs, HL shows performance based on the change in share price, with dividends ignored.0 -
londoninvestor wrote: »For ITs, HL shows performance based on the change in share price, with dividends ignored.
It depends where you look, some of HL's charts do show Total Return
0 -
dividendhero wrote: »It depends where you look, some of HL's charts do show Total Return

I know how to get that for funds - do you know how to get to it for ITs?0 -
londoninvestor wrote: »I know how to get that for funds - do you know how to get to it for ITs?
It's a little bit counter intuitive, you go into funds - pick a fund and chart it. You can then compare it to equities, which includes IT's. You have a choice of price or total return.
One hitch is that it maxes at 5 years0 -
I'm sure the OP knew this all along but, was just putting it out there to stimulate debate and raise awareness for others.bowlhead99 wrote: »At Morningstar the 3 year "ann" figure means the total return over the three year period works out to 8.82 annualised. So the 8.82% is an annual figure, not the total figure. If you received that rate of return for three years in a row with all the returns left reinvested and compounded up, you would end up after three years with a total profit of 28.16%. Which agrees with what ii.co.uk told you the fund delivered after three years in total.
So the 3 and 5 years figures at Morningstar are annual average compounding returns, white the 3 and 5 years figures at ii co.uk are total returns over the period. If you are trying to compare a fund's performance against other funds' published data, you might prefer to be told the annualised return over a period, or the total return for the period, depending what format the rest of your data is in.
The Morningstar (5 year ann) figure means it gave an annualised return of 6.11% over 5 years.
What happens if you invest some money and grow it by an annual return of 6.11% five times in a row?
£10,000 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 x 1.0611 = about £13,450.
Same as if you got a total return of 34.5% (10,000 x 1.345 = £13,450).
So, Morningstar and ii are wholly consistent, just presenting the same performance in a different format.
Personal Responsibility - Sad but True
Sometimes.... I am like a dog with a bone0 -
dividendhero wrote: »It's a little bit counter intuitive, you go into funds - pick a fund and chart it. You can then compare it to equities, which includes IT's. You have a choice of price or total return.
One hitch is that it maxes at 5 years
Aha - got it. Thanks very much!
And it gives 34.5% total performance for CTY over 5 years, just like Morningstar.0 -
I'm sure the OP knew this all along but, was just putting it out there to stimulate debate and raise awareness for others.

Of course. I mean you couldn't get to a situation where you had so much wealth that each years ISA contribution was just a small blip, without knowing this stuff. Could you?0 -
I'm sure lots of us find ourselves in that position by luck or judgement. Wouldn't want to speculate how capital0ne found himself there.I mean you couldn't get to a situation where you had so much wealth that each years ISA contribution was just a small blip...
But when you get to a largish portfolio, it becomes meaningless to consider prospective performance of new invested money because it would be such a small single digit percentage of the random gains and losses delivered by the rest of the haphazardly constructed portfolio.
So I only invest in individual shares, and then I don't need to look at so-called 'performance tables' published by investment funds and consider whether their annualised or total return percentages are interchangable.
For posterity
https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showpost.php?p=74158062 :rotfl:0
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