bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : Understanding the personalized Rate of Return In my 403k web site, I saw that my personalized rate of return as 4.25%. To understand it, I clicked the question mark. Your personalized rate of return (PRR) represents - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

Understanding the personalized Rate of Return
In my 403k web site, I saw that my personalized rate of return as 4.25%.

To understand it, I clicked the question mark.

Your personalized rate of return (PRR) represents the specific performance of the investment choices you have selected. The PRR calculates the percentage change of your account balance by weighting all activity included in the time period measured. It includes your investment earnings during the period and is net of plan fees and credits. Indicated returns are cumulative for all periods shown.

But I still don't understand it. Does it indicate the pure return of my investment combination on the market or it includes the monthly deposit from my employer and my deduction from my paycheck?


Load Full (2)

Login to follow hoots

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

Does it indicate the pure return of my investment combination on the
market or it includes the monthly deposit from my employer and my
deduction from my paycheck?

The former.

Contributions you make and employer matching are not included in the rate calculation. If they were then your rate of return would be much higher. Consider if you had 00 in the account at the end of last year, and you put in 00 this year and your total was currently 00, you would have a 0% rate of return this year, not 100%!

Your personalized rate of return does not include your contributions, but it is affected by the timing of them. Typically contributions are made at every paycheck, which means most people will have somewhere between 12-52 contributions per year. But let's pretend you only had 1 or 2 contributions in a year in this simplified comparison:

You make 1 contribution of 00 at the beginning of the year. During the first 6 months your investments don't do very well and you get an average rate of -3%. (After 6 months your balance is 0.) During the 2nd 6 months of the year your investments do well and you get an average rate of return of 8%. (After 12 months your balance is 47.60.) Your average rate of return for the entire year in this case is 4.76%.
You contribute 0 at the beginning of the year, and 0 after 6 months, and the rate of returns are the same as above. After 6 months at -3% you would have 5, and after 6 more months of 8% you would have 63.8, which yields an average rate of return of 6.38% for the year. You did better in this situation because you had less money invested during the losing period, so you lost less. This meant you had more to invest during the gaining period.

Note that the explanation you quoted mentions that fees (and credits) are included in the rate calculation, so your total rate could be slightly lower (or higher) than the aggregate of the individual investments in your portfolio.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

It is a weighted return of your investment choices. Consider how if you did a lump sum at the start of the year, sums every 6 months, sums ever 3 months and sums every month would each likely get different returns for why this is a calculation done on your specific balance.

Thus it is about when was money put into your plan that has garnered this return.


Back to top Use Dark theme