PlanNew Gutenberg

()

Basic Info

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() Dividend Info

() dividend growth in the last 12 months is

The trailing 12-month yield of is . its dividend history:

 

Return Calculator for ()

Calculate Performance

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() Historical Returns And Risk Info

From to , the compound annualized total return (dividend reinvested) of  () is . Its cumulative total return (dividend reinvested) is .

From to , the Maximum Drawdown of () is .

From to , the Sharpe Ratio of () is .

From to , the Annualized Standard Deviation of () is .

From to , the Beta of () is .

No Data.

() Historical Return Chart

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Click here for comparison with other funds, portfolios or stocks

() Rolling Returns Charts

A rolling return for a period such as 5-year, as of a specific date, represents the investment’s performance over the preceding five years leading up to that date. In the 5-year rolling chart, the value on any given date corresponds to the annualized return for the preceding 5 years up to that very date. Thus, for instance, the chart value on 8/28/2015 reflects the annualized return from 8/28/2010 to 8/28/2015. A 5-year rolling return chart for an investment (stock, fund or portfolio) depicts the return sequence of 5-year trailing returns for the dates in the chart.

These rolling returns contrast with the most recent 3, 5, 10, and 15-year returns, as they solely depict the returns for those respective periods leading up to the most recent date, without encompassing every date in the historical record.

Rolling return charts offer a more precise insight into a portfolio’s risk and return stability (including funds or individual stocks). This is particularly true when focusing on the minimal return points within a rolling return chart as a measure of a fund or a portfolio’s risk. A well-known observation, often attributed to ‘Murphy’s law’, is that it tends to perform poorly when investors decide to follow an investment due to its recent strong returns. Sound familiar? Information regarding minimum rolling returns could help mitigate this predicament. Investors can opt for an investment showcasing high minimum rolling returns within their preferred holding durations. In fact, merely possessing knowledge of such minimum rolling period returns can anchor investors’ expectations.

For instance, let’s consider an investor who follows a model portfolio (or even simply purchases and holds a fund like VFINX or SPY) for 10 years. Armed with knowledge of this portfolio’s minimum 10-year rolling return since its inception date or the fund’s inception (in the case of VFINX, recognizing that the minimum 10-year rolling return since 1987 could be as low as -2.24%), the investor should reasonably anticipate the potential for the portfolio to incur losses over the forthcoming 10 years.

Minimum rolling return for a period such as 10-year offers a different and often better historical risk and return metric than other popular risk and return metrics such as Sharpe ratio, standard deviation (volatility) or maximum drawdown.

See Portfolio Calculator and Rolling Returns for more detailed description.


From to , the worst annualized return of 3-year rolling returns for () is .


From to , the worst annualized return of 5-year rolling returns for () is .


From to , the worst annualized return of 10-year rolling returns for () is .


From to , the worst annualized return of 20-year rolling returns for () is .

() Maximum Drawdown Analysis

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Related Articles for () 

How to use the PlanNew Gutenberg

The PlanNew Gutenberg is designed to help you pressure-test retirement savings, contribution strategy, tax tradeoffs, and long-term investing outcomes before you make a real-world change. Instead of relying on one rough estimate, run a few scenarios with conservative, base-case, and optimistic assumptions so you can see how sensitive the result is to returns, contribution levels, inflation, taxes, or timing.

A calculator result is most useful when you connect it to the account or plan decisions you actually control. After reviewing the output, compare it with your current savings rate, employer match rules, investment menu, expense levels, and withdrawal or rollover options. That is where MyPlanIQ's plan pages and retirement research become useful companions to the raw number.

If the result looks weak, treat that as a planning signal rather than a dead end. Small changes such as contributing earlier in the year, capturing the full company match, lowering fees, adjusting withdrawal assumptions, or choosing a more suitable allocation can materially change long-term outcomes. Re-run the calculator after each change and use the related links below to keep moving from estimate to action.

Related resources

Calculator FAQs

What inputs should you change first in this calculator?

Start with the assumptions you can control in real life, such as contribution amount, retirement age, withdrawal rate, fees, and asset allocation. Then test optimistic and conservative versions so you can see which inputs change the outcome the most.

How should you use a calculator result?

Treat the result as a planning scenario rather than a prediction. Compare it with your workplace plan rules, savings rate, expected retirement timing, and investment options before making a real portfolio or contribution decision.

What should you do after reviewing the output?

Use the related links to compare retirement plans, read the connected MyPlanIQ article, and test one or two adjacent calculators so you can move from a single estimate to a fuller decision framework.