INSIGHTS

Measuring Your Returns

Many investors think their portfolio is performing well simply because the balance has increased. But true investment performance goes far

Most investors think they are measuring investment performance correctly.

They are not.

Many simply look at whether the portfolio value increased and conclude that the investment “performed well.”

But investing is not only about whether your money grows. It is about how fast it grows, whether growth beats inflation, whether the returns justify the risk taken, and whether your portfolio is helping you reach your financial goals.

PATH Principle

Measuring returns helps you move from guessing to knowing. If you cannot measure your investment performance, you cannot properly manage your progress.

Why Measuring Returns Matters

Measuring returns helps investors answer important questions: Is this investment performing well? Is inflation quietly reducing my purchasing power? Which investment is performing best? Am I taking unnecessary risk? Am I on track toward financial independence?

Without measurement, investing becomes emotional and unclear. And what cannot be measured cannot be improved.

Good Return Measurement Helps You See

  • Whether your investment is growing at an acceptable rate
  • Whether inflation is reducing your real wealth
  • Whether your returns justify the risk you are taking
  • Whether one investment is outperforming another
  • Whether you are still moving toward your financial goals

The Difference Between Growth and Performance

Suppose your portfolio increased from ZMW 50,000 to ZMW 60,000. At first glance, that looks good.

But disciplined investors immediately ask better questions. How much additional money did I contribute? How much of the increase came from investment growth? What percentage return did I actually earn? Was inflation higher than my return? Could I have earned better returns elsewhere?

This is why portfolio growth and investment performance are not always the same thing.

Growth vs True Performance

Scenario What You See What You Must Ask
Portfolio balance increased Your account moved from ZMW 50,000 to ZMW 60,000 Was the increase caused by investment growth or new contributions?
You received income Your bond or unit trust paid interest or distributions Was the income reinvested or withdrawn?
Your shares rose in value The market value of your shares increased Did you also receive dividends, and what was your total return?
Your investment beat last year’s value The balance is higher than before Did it beat inflation and your expected return?

Nominal Returns vs Real Returns

One of the most important concepts investors must understand is the difference between nominal returns and real returns.

A nominal return is the stated return on an investment. For example, a unit trust earns 18%, a bond yields 20%, or a share portfolio grows by 25%.

A real return adjusts for inflation. If your investment return is 20% and inflation is 15%, your real return is roughly 5%.

This is why inflation matters so much. An investment can grow in value while still losing real purchasing power.

Sample Return Calculation

Item Example Meaning
Investment Return 20% The stated growth or yield earned by the investment.
Inflation 15% The rate at which purchasing power is being reduced.
Approximate Real Return 5% The approximate increase in purchasing power after inflation.

Common Types of Investment Returns

Different investments generate returns differently. To understand performance properly, you need to know where your return is coming from.

How Different Investments Generate Returns

Type of Return Where It Comes From Example
Capital Gains Increase in the value of an asset Buying shares at ZMW 10 and selling at ZMW 15
Interest Income Income paid by debt-based investments GRZ bonds, Treasury bills, money market funds, fixed deposits
Dividend Income Income paid by companies to shareholders Dividends from listed companies
Total Return Combination of capital gains, dividends, and interest The full performance picture of your investment

Why Percentage Returns Matter

Many investors focus on the amount earned instead of the percentage earned.

For example, Investor A earns ZMW 5,000 on ZMW 20,000, while Investor B earns ZMW 5,000 on ZMW 200,000. The amount earned is the same, but the performance is completely different.

Percentage returns allow investors to compare investments properly.

Annualized Returns Matter

Time also matters when measuring performance. A 10% return over one year is very different from a 10% return over five years.

This is why professional investors often use annualized returns. Annualized returns standardize performance over time, making comparison easier.

Compounding Changes Everything

Compounding is one of the most powerful concepts in investing. Even small differences in returns create enormous long-term differences.

ZMW 10,000 invested at 10% and ZMW 10,000 invested at 20% may not look dramatically different after one year. But over decades, the difference becomes massive.

This is why disciplined long-term investing matters so much.

Returns Must Be Viewed Alongside Risk

Higher returns usually come with higher risk. A portfolio earning 30% may sound exciting, but investors should also ask: How volatile is the portfolio? How much downside risk exists? Is the return sustainable? What happens during market downturns?

Good investing is not about chasing the highest return. It is about balancing returns with acceptable risk.

Benchmark Your Returns Properly

Returns should never be viewed in isolation. Investors should compare returns against inflation, bond yields, money market returns, stock market performance, and their own financial goals.

For example, if GRZ bonds are yielding 20%, an investor taking far more risk should expect meaningfully higher returns to justify that additional risk.

Context matters.

“The best investment is not always the one with the highest return. It is the one helping you reach your goal with the right balance of return, risk, and time.”

Your Action Step

Choose one investment you currently own and calculate its return over the last 12 months. Then compare that return against inflation and your original expected return.

Final Thoughts

Measuring returns properly changes the way investors think.

It replaces assumptions with clarity and transforms investing from emotional guessing into structured decision-making.

Successful investing is not simply about making money. It is about understanding how your money is working for you.

Ready to Build a Smarter Investment System?

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