Quantcast
Skip to content
Rss page opens in new windowYouTube page opens in new windowPinterest page opens in new windowTwitter page opens in new window
Joshua Kennon
Thoughts on Business, Politics, and Life from a Private Investor
Joshua KennonJoshua Kennon
  • Blog
    • Read All
    • Archive By Year
      • 2015
      • 2014
      • 2013
      • 2012
      • 2011
      • 2010
      • 2009
    • Read Joshua’s Investing for Beginners Site at About.com
      • Directory of Joshua’s About.com Content
      • Newest Article List
      • Go to Investing for Beginners Site
  • More
    • Books
      • My Books
      • Recommended Reading
    • Podcasts
    • Spreadsheets
    • Videos
    • Shop
    • Thoughts & Observations
    • Mental Models
      • Cognitive Biases
    • Legal Stuff
      • Commenting Policy
      • Cookie Policy
      • Terms & Conditions
      • Privacy Policy
    • Reader Demographics
    • Projects
  • Contact
  • About
Search:
Search
  • Blog
    • Read All
    • Archive By Year
      • 2015
      • 2014
      • 2013
      • 2012
      • 2011
      • 2010
      • 2009
    • Read Joshua’s Investing for Beginners Site at About.com
      • Directory of Joshua’s About.com Content
      • Newest Article List
      • Go to Investing for Beginners Site
  • More
    • Books
      • My Books
      • Recommended Reading
    • Podcasts
    • Spreadsheets
    • Videos
    • Shop
    • Thoughts & Observations
    • Mental Models
      • Cognitive Biases
    • Legal Stuff
      • Commenting Policy
      • Cookie Policy
      • Terms & Conditions
      • Privacy Policy
    • Reader Demographics
    • Projects
  • Contact
  • About

Daily Archives: December 2, 2012

You are here:
  1. Home
  2. 2012
  3. December
  4. 02

Focus on Total Return When Managing Your Portfolio

Focus on Total Return to Manage Your Investments Better

StocksBy Joshua KennonDecember 2, 20123 Comments

In finance, there is a concept known as total return.  The goal of total return is simple: To tell you what the overall results were to you, the owner, during a time period you held an asset.  This includes any fluctuations in the liquidation value of the asset itself, profits produced by the asset and distributed to you as dividends, spin-offs from activity split off from the asset, etc.

Joshua Kennon
Copyright © Joshua Kennon. All Rights Reserved.
Go to Top