chuckstuff
New member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2016
- Messages
- 2
I use the XIRR function on the OpenOffice spreadsheet to calculate my annualized rates of return for a stock portfolio that dates back to 2003. The top of column A is the original cash investment, and everything else in that column reflects either new money added or an occasional cash withdrawal. The last entry in the column is the present value of the portfolio expressed as a negative. Column B lists the dates corresponding to the entries in Column A. An example of the formula used is =XIRR(A1:A10;B1:B10)
Wanting to see how the portfolio has done since 2009, I used the portfolio value on 1/1/09 at the top of Column A ($55,332). There were a couple of small additions subsequent, but then in 2014 there was a large cash addition of approximately $100,000. The closing value on 12/31/15 was $296,493.15. This was expressed as a negative at the bottom of Column A.
Using XIRR, the calculation said that my internal rate of return was 13.51%. This is several percentage points above what I expected to achieve, so I wanted to know if the large cash addition is somehow skewing the results. It's possible that I had several really good years, but the realist in me tends to think that I'm missing something--even though I've always operated under the assumption that XIRR somehow takes into account the cash additions when calculating the portfolio's return.
Is there another calculation I should be doing? Because it seems to me that my cash additions will always artificially inflate the portfolio's performance.
Thanks for your time everyone...
Wanting to see how the portfolio has done since 2009, I used the portfolio value on 1/1/09 at the top of Column A ($55,332). There were a couple of small additions subsequent, but then in 2014 there was a large cash addition of approximately $100,000. The closing value on 12/31/15 was $296,493.15. This was expressed as a negative at the bottom of Column A.
Using XIRR, the calculation said that my internal rate of return was 13.51%. This is several percentage points above what I expected to achieve, so I wanted to know if the large cash addition is somehow skewing the results. It's possible that I had several really good years, but the realist in me tends to think that I'm missing something--even though I've always operated under the assumption that XIRR somehow takes into account the cash additions when calculating the portfolio's return.
Is there another calculation I should be doing? Because it seems to me that my cash additions will always artificially inflate the portfolio's performance.
Thanks for your time everyone...