Return On Assets Managed - ROAM

  

Categories: Investing, Metrics

See: Assets Under Management.

You were given $100 million to start and, in just a year, you turned it into $172 million. 72% annualized return. Nice work. But then, the next year, you were given a billion dollars more, so that now you had 1.172 billion AUM. You made another $72 million in your Year Two. But that number...kinda sucked.

Why? Because you had sooooo much more in assets under management. Meaning: you had only $100 million to start, and from that relatively small number, you made $72 million. But then, from a number about 6 times as large, you made the same return. Something like 6% return in Year Two.

The key: the total dollar value return doesn't mean all that much in a vacuum. It gets contextualized based on the amount of money you started with to then spit out a total annualized return. That's what this metric focuses on. And it gets really dicey in venture capital and private equity calculations where they don't call all the money upfront in the beginning. Rather, they make maybe a dozen calls for capital over the life of the fund, and the clock then starts ticking a dozen times.

Way complex to figure out the total return rates, annualized. But they do.

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Finance: What are Time-Weighted Rate Of ...1 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what are time and risk waited rates

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of return a dollar today is worth more than a

00:10

dollar tomorrow Like that's the central prayer of the financial

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force Here's the gist You've double your money in an

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investment Is that good Bad ugly mon We need a

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whole lot more information here Tto answer Did you buy

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thirty eight million and two dollars worth of lottery tickets

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and that last two dollar ticket got you seventy six

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million in winnings Was that like a good investment Or

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how about this You took thirty six years to double

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your money Was that good I answer to both No

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not at all The lottery ticket example is a risk

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waited return The lottery famously takes advantage of ignorant people

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spending their hard earned money on tickets representing dreams but

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which have horrible odds of any kind of decent pay

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back But the lottery makes go into a vegas casino

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look like actually a good deal so you may win

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but it's a bad risk no matter how you look

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at it And hey somebody has to pay those teacher

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pension bill So why shouldn't it be people who didn't

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graduate high school Right Well the time waiting is a

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big deal to in a world where the stock market

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broadly speaking doubles on its own About every eight nine

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ten twelve years Something like that This calculation is done

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over very long periods of time and it's held true

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for about a century and change in america So if

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he took thirty six years to double your money well

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it implies you only made two percent a year as

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your rate of return Remember that rule of seventy two

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thing Yeah that right there Seventy two divided by thirty

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six and you get a whopping two percent return Well

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in that same period of time the market might have

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doubled in four times So the ten grand that double

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to be twenty grand in thirty six freakin years under

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your watch we'll have you just put it into an

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index fund of the s and p five hundred over

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that same time period Well it would have doubled once

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along the timeline here to be twenty grand then doubled

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again here to be forty grand and then doubled again

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here to be a tigre rine and then ah forthe

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doubling right here after thirty six years maybe one hundred

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sixty grand And that's just an index fund Nothing fancy

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Not warren buffett Just a basic vanilla index fund that

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anyone with two hundred fifty bucks in their pocket can

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buy And it's worth noting dividends which often get ignored

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in the financial press actually matter a ton when it

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comes to the calculation of long term investment results Generally

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speaking that continued payment of dividends is a low risk

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adventure Very few companies ever cut or fully do away

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with their dividends And if they do well it means

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a pretty much everything is rotten in denmark so you

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can count on dividends The bolster overall returns that historically

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dividends have had a wide range of somewhere between two

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and seven or eight percent for the mid range of

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the s and p five hundred But if you pegged

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them around and three ish percent today and changed to

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reflect the modern era well then the overall market need

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only compounded about five percent To deliver that five plus

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three percent and change eight ish percent total returns That

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will allow the stock market to double about every nine

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years or so right so we're ignoring taxes here but

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we're ignoring the use of dividends proceeds to buy more

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shares every quarter as well when those dividends air paid

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So when you think about time and risk think about

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them like they're a kind of financial stone soup which

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when mixed together with the right spices of tax hedges

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leverage and a bull market well make a really nice

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retirement meal and you don't even need your teeth on 00:03:22.773 --> [endTime] a bonus

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