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Average Return Calculator

Analyze historical portfolio performance. Compare the simple Arithmetic Average Return against compounding Geometric CAGR and calculate volatility drag.

Geometric Mean Return (CAGR)
5.252%

Cumulative Return: 29.17%

Arithmetic average7.000%
Standard Deviation21.095%
Volatility Drag1.748%
Ending Balance (Actual)$12,917

Historical Grid

Year 1
%
Year 2
%
Year 3
%
Year 4
%
Year 5
%
Dollar Compounding Paths
Projections & Actions
The Simple average TrapStandard arithmetic averages assume returns are independent and non-compounding, which systematically overstates wealth. The true realized return is the Geometric Mean (CAGR). In this case, simple averages overstate your final balance by $1,109.

Arithmetic vs. Geometric Average Return & Volatility Drag

When evaluating mutual funds or investment portfolios, financial institutions often advertise their simple average return (arithmetic mean). However, the simple average systematically overstates how much your money actually grew. To understand true wealth accumulation, you must calculate the geometric average return, also known as the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR).

The Mathematics of Volatility Drag

Volatility drag is the negative impact that fluctuations and variance in year-to-year returns exert on your compounded terminal balance. In simple terms, losses hurt you more than equivalent percentage gains help you. For example, if a portfolio gains 50% in Year 1 and loses 50% in Year 2, the arithmetic average return is exactly 0%:
Arithmetic Average = (50% + -50%) / 2 = 0%

However, if you started with $10,000, a 50% gain makes it $15,000, and a subsequent 50% loss reduces it to $7,500. You have lost 25% of your initial capital. The true compound rate of return (geometric average) is actually -13.4% per year.

How to Use Volatility Stats

By inputting your annual return percentages or chronological year-end asset values, our calculator computes the standard deviation of returns to measure risk. It also estimates the volatility drag using the standard approximation:
Volatility Drag ≈ (Standard Deviation)² / 2

This helps you understand why portfolios with lower volatility (steady gains) can sometimes outperform highly volatile ones, even if the simple average return of the volatile portfolio is higher.

Frequently Asked Questions About Average Returns

Why is the geometric return lower than the arithmetic return?

The geometric return is always lower than or equal to the arithmetic return due to compounding. Volatility causes losses that require much larger percentage gains to recover, pulling down the geometric average return.

Can this calculator show volatility drag?

Yes. Compare arithmetic vs geometric returns to see the volatility impact on portfolio growth.