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Actually I think we are on the right track. I got the same results as you
when i did it initially. Since that return of 710.032 is an annualized return, I had to DE-ANNUALIZE it to get the return for the month., Which I did as follows: (710.32/100+1)^(30/365) = 1.1876, 0r 18.76% (when you take it out of its compound form) This is the right answer. I checked this result with the answer I got from using another method, which I know to be right. "JoeU2004" wrote: "Petrak" wrote: For some reason I am getting a nonsensical answer. I have no idea why, since you do not even tell us what answer you got, much less how you are using XIRR. For future reference, it would be prudent to provide that information with any question about usage. XIRR is notorious for returning nonsensical results under some conditions. But apparently, this is not one of those times. Also, Excel can yield confusing results because of its attempts to intuit the right format or because of a pre-existing cell format. When in doubt, explicitly choose an appropriate format. Could I get some advise on how to set it up and let me know what the correct answer (return) is? I put the dates (e.g. 1/1/2009, 1/5/2009) in A1:A5, and I put the signed cash flows in B1:B5, namely: -100, -5, 10, 3 and 110. Then I use the following formula in B6: =XIRR(B1:B5,A1:A5) formatted as Percentage with 2 decimal places. The result is about 710.32%. As a double-check, I confirm that the NPV is about zero with the formula: =XNPV(B6,B1:B5,A1:A5) formatted as number with 2 decimal places. (Note: This double-check is important to do with XIRR since it will return nonsensical numbers instead of the documented #NUM or #DIV/0 error when it is unable to compute the rate of return within limits. XIRR should do the double-check; but it doesn't (sigh).) The key with most (but not all !) Excel financial functions is to be sure that inflows and outflows have opposite signs. Although it does not matter whether inflow or outflow is positive, it is conventional to show inflows as positive numbers. Note that an initial investment or beginning balance is treated as an outflow, and an ending balance is treated as an inflow. If an annualized return of 710% seems nonsensical to you (as it should), it is because it is unrealistic and usually misleading to annualize returns over very short time periods, unless you are dealing with a constant or nearly-constant return rate (e.g. fixed interest rate). Nonetheless, 710% is the correct annualized returned for your cash flows. ----- original message ----- "Petrak" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate a dollar-weighted investment return for a month period with some cash flows on some days in the month, For example: Jan 1: $100 Beginning market value Jan 5: $5 added Jan 10: $10 taken out Jan 15: $3 taken out. Jan 31: Ending market value is $110. I assume I use XIRR to get the return for the month. For some reason I am getting a nonsensical answer. Could I get some advise on how to set it up and let me know what the correct answer (return) is? |
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