When you invest in mutual funds, it’s important to understand how your
returns are measured, because different methods reflect performance differently. The three commonly used terms are
Absolute Returns, CAGR, and XIRR.
1️⃣ Absolute ReturnsDefinition:Absolute returns represent the
total percentage gain or loss on your investment over a specific period.
Formula:Absolute Return (%)=Current Value−Invested AmountInvested Amount×100\text{Absolute Return (\%)} = \frac{\text{Current Value} - \text{Invested Amount}}{\text{Invested Amount}} \times 100Absolute Return (%)=Invested AmountCurrent Value−Invested Amount×100
Example:- Invested ₹1,00,000 in a mutual fund
- Current value after 2 years = ₹1,50,000
Absolute Return=1,50,000−1,00,0001,00,000×100=50%\text{Absolute Return} = \frac{1,50,000 - 1,00,000}{1,00,000} \times 100 = 50\%Absolute Return=1,00,0001,50,000−1,00,000×100=50%
Key Point:- Absolute returns do not account for the time period. 50% over 1 year is very different from 50% over 5 years.
2️⃣ CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate)Definition:CAGR is the
annualized return that shows the
steady growth rate of your investment, assuming it grows at a constant rate every year.
Formula:CAGR (%)=(Ending ValueBeginning Value)1Years−1\text{CAGR (\%)} = \left(\frac{\text{Ending Value}}{\text{Beginning Value}}\right)^{\frac{1}{\text{Years}}} - 1CAGR (%)=(Beginning ValueEnding Value)Years1−1
Example:- Invested ₹1,00,000
- Value after 3 years = ₹1,50,000
CAGR=(1,50,0001,00,000)13−1≈14.47% per year\text{CAGR} = \left(\frac{1,50,000}{1,00,000}\right)^{\frac{1}{3}} - 1 \approx 14.47\% \text{ per year}CAGR=(1,00,0001,50,000)31−1≈14.47% per year
Key Point:- CAGR accounts for time, giving a more realistic measure of annual growth.
- Useful for lumpsum investments.
3️⃣ XIRR (Extended Internal Rate of Return)Definition:XIRR is used for investments with
multiple cash flows at
different times, such as
SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) investments in mutual funds. It gives the
annualized return considering the exact date of each investment.
How it Works:- It calculates the internal rate of return for all inflows and outflows, considering the timing of each contribution.
- Often calculated using Excel or online SIP calculators.
Example:- You invest ₹10,000 per month for 12 months via SIP
- Ending corpus = ₹1,32,000
- XIRR calculation will show the annualized return accounting for all monthly contributions.
Key Point:- XIRR is the most accurate measure for SIPs because it factors in the timing of every installment.
🧠 Quick ComparisonReturn TypeBest ForConsiders Time?Single or Multiple InvestmentsAbsolute ReturnQuick performance check❌Single or multipleCAGRLumpsum investments over years✅Single investmentXIRRSIPs or multiple cash flows✅Multiple investments
✅ TakeawaysAbsolute returns are simple but ignore the investment period.
CAGR gives a smooth annualized growth rate for lumpsum investments.
XIRR is ideal for SIPs, capturing
time and cash flow variations.Always check whether the mutual fund data shows
CAGR, XIRR, or absolute returns before comparing schemes.
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