Compound Rate Calculator (CAGR)
Understanding Compound Rate Calculation
The compound rate, often referred to as the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR), provides a smoothed representation of the annual return or growth of a specific metric over a set period of time. Unlike a simple average, the compound rate accounts for the "compounding effect," where growth in one period builds upon the growth of the previous period.
The Compound Rate Formula
To determine the compound rate manually, you use the following mathematical formula:
Why Calculate Compound Rates?
Investors and business analysts use compound rates because they effectively "cancel out" the volatility of periodic fluctuations. It provides a single percentage that represents the steady rate at which an investment would have grown if it had grown at the same rate every year and the profits were reinvested.
Step-by-Step Example
Imagine you have a portfolio that started at 5,000 units and grew to 12,000 units over a period of 8 years. To find the compound rate:
- Step 1: Divide the ending value by the beginning value: 12,000 / 5,000 = 2.4.
- Step 2: Raise that result to the power of 1 divided by the number of years: 2.4 ^ (1/8) ≈ 1.1156.
- Step 3: Subtract 1 from the result: 1.1156 – 1 = 0.1156.
- Step 4: Multiply by 100 to get the percentage: 11.56%.
Common Use Cases
- Investment Performance: Comparing the growth of stocks or mutual funds over different decades.
- Business Revenue: Measuring the expansion of a company's market share or annual sales.
- Demographics: Calculating the compound growth rate of a city's population over census periods.
- Technology: Tracking the increase in processing power or user acquisition rates.