Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Nominal Return ====== Nominal return is the raw, headline number you see on your investment statement. It's the percentage change in the value of your investment over a specific period, calculated //before// accounting for any pesky real-world subtractions like inflation, taxes, or fees. Think of it as your investment's gross pay. If you buy a stock for $100 and sell it a year later for $110, you've made a $10 profit. Your nominal return is a neat and tidy 10%. It’s simple, easy to calculate, and feels good to look at. However, relying solely on this figure is like judging a marathon runner's speed without knowing if they had a massive tailwind. The nominal return tells you that you have more money, but it doesn't tell you what that money can actually //buy//. For a true measure of your investment success, you need to look past this surface-level number and dig into its much more insightful cousin: the [[real return]]. ===== The Illusion of Gain: Why Nominal Return Can Deceive You ===== The biggest flaw of the nominal return is that it lives in a vacuum, completely ignoring the erosive power of [[inflation]]. Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is rising, and subsequently, [[purchasing power]] is falling. Imagine you're jogging on a treadmill. The screen shows you’ve run five miles—that’s your nominal return. But what if the entire treadmill was on a truck driving three miles in the opposite direction? You've only advanced two miles in the real world. That’s your real return. If your investment earns a 5% nominal return in a year where inflation is also 5%, you haven't actually gained any purchasing power. You have more dollars, but each dollar buys less, leaving you right back where you started. In a high-inflation environment, a handsome nominal return can easily disguise a real-world loss. This is why savvy investors learn to look past the headline number. ===== From Nominal to Real: Doing the Math ===== Understanding the difference in your head is great, but seeing it in numbers is what truly matters. ==== The Nominal Return Formula ==== Calculating the nominal return is straightforward. It’s the profit (or loss) from an investment expressed as a percentage of the original cost. * **Formula:** ((Current Market Value - Original Investment Value) / Original Investment Value) x 100 * **Example:** * You invest $1,000 in a stock. * One year later, you sell it for $1,080. * Calculation: (($1,080 - $1,000) / $1,000) x 100 = **8% Nominal Return** ==== Unmasking the Real Return ==== To find the real return, you simply adjust the nominal return for the [[Inflation Rate]]. While the precise formula is (1 + Real Return) = (1 + Nominal Return) / (1 + Inflation Rate), a quick and widely used approximation works for most situations. * **Approximate Formula:** Real Return ≈ Nominal Return - Inflation Rate * **Example (continued):** * Your nominal return was 8%. * Let's say the inflation rate for that year was 3%. * Calculation: 8% - 3% = **5% Real Return** Suddenly, that 8% gain feels a bit less impressive, doesn't it? Your investment didn't make you 8% richer; it made you 5% richer in terms of what you can actually buy. ===== The Value Investing Litmus Test: Beating the 'Tapeworm' ===== [[Value investing|Value investors]], in the tradition of [[Benjamin Graham]] and [[Warren Buffett]], are obsessed with real returns. They know that the goal isn't just to accumulate more dollars, but to increase long-term purchasing power. Buffett famously described inflation as a "giant corporate tapeworm," one that silently consumes corporate earnings from the inside before they ever reach shareholders. For a value investor, an investment must pass a simple but crucial test: can it generate a return that significantly outpaces inflation and [[taxes]] over the long haul? This is a core part of the [[margin of safety]]. A cheap stock is no bargain if the underlying business can't protect its value from being eroded by inflation. This is why value investors favor businesses with durable competitive advantages, often called "moats." These companies typically have [[pricing power]]—the ability to raise their prices to keep up with rising costs without losing customers. This protects their profitability and, in turn, the investor's real return. Always remember to subtract not just inflation but also [[investment fees]] and taxes from your nominal return to get a true picture of your performance. The nominal return is the starting point, not the finish line.