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How to calculate your actual investment performance

How to calculate your actual investment performance

A question we’re often asked is: What is my performance? If you’re like most people and you calculate your returns by dividing your account’s end value by its initial value, a method called simple rate of return (SRR), then you could be off, way off. Using SRR may be appropriate only if you deposited a lump sum into your account and made no additional deposits or withdrawals. That’s not true for most people who tend to make additional deposits, withdrawals, or both. Financial professionals prefer to use the time weighted return (TWR) method for assessing performance. TWR captures the performance of the underlying investments without being distorted by the timing or size of cash flows (deposits/withdrawals) in or out of your account. TWR is useful when analyzing your manager’s performance and comparing them to a competitor or a benchmark. Assume that your portfolio was $100,000 on January 1st and $130,000 on December 31st of the same year and that you made no additional deposits/withdrawals to your account; in this case, your SRR would be 30%. Now assume that you started the year with $100,000 and then deposited $20,000 on June 15 and that your portfolio’s market value was $130,000 on

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Don’t break up the big banks. Give Islamic banking a try.

Recently appointed Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari stunned the banking industry after a recent speech in which he advocated breaking up “too big to fail” banks. In remarks at the Brookings Institution in mid-February, Kashkari said the “biggest banks are still too big to fail and continue to pose a significant, ongoing risk to our economy.” One solution he proposes is to break up large banks into smaller, less influential entities. He also suggests turning the large banks into public utilities by forcing them to hold so much capital that they are almost guaranteed to remain solvent. The goal seems to be greater access to capital with less risk of a financial collapse like we saw in 2008-09. While these ideas have merit, Kashkari didn’t mention one option that could arguably result in the greatest social good: Islamic banking. If he’s interested in a banking system that works for everyone and an alternative that can co-exist within our current regulatory regime alongside cooperatives like credit unions, it’s an idea worth considering. Here’s why. The public perception of the finance industry in general is that it only exists to benefit the rich. Islamic banking requires financial institutions to have an

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