Skip to content
MintByte
§01 · EDITORIAL · GLOSSARY · ABSOLUTE-RETURN

Absolute Return

Absolute Return is the simple, unannualized gain or loss on an investment expressed as a percentage of the original capital, regardless of how long the money was invested. Formula: Absolute Return = ((Ending Value - Beginning Value) / Beginning Value

Glossary

Absolute Return is the simple, unannualized gain or loss on an investment expressed as a percentage of the original capital, regardless of how long the money was invested.

Formula: Absolute Return = ((Ending Value - Beginning Value) / Beginning Value) x 100. No compounding adjustment, no benchmark comparison.

Example: Rs.50,000 invested in an ELSS scheme grows to Rs.68,000 over the 3-year lock-in. Absolute return = (68,000 - 50,000) / 50,000 = 36%. The equivalent CAGR is only 10.78%.

When to use: Reporting performance for periods under 1 year (where annualizing distorts the picture), describing point-to-point returns in marketing material, or quoting realized P&L on a closed trade. Avoid for multi-year comparisons - it makes a 36% / 3-yr fund look better than a 12% / 1-yr fund, which is misleading.

SEBI caveat: SEBI requires mutual fund advertisements to show CAGR (not absolute returns) for any period exceeding 1 year, precisely because absolute numbers can mislead retail investors. Always ask: 'over what period?'

Related: CAGR, Annualized Return, Total Return, XIRR.

Reviewed · January 2026

Adjacent surfaces

Glossary A-ZBrowse every term, organised alphabetically.MethodologyWhere the formula behind this term lives.InsightsEditorial pieces that apply this concept.

Glossary definitions are written for Indian capital allocators first; where US convention differs, the entry calls that out explicitly. MintByte is an AMFI-registered mutual fund distributor (ARN-314872); SEBI Registered Investment Adviser and Research Analyst registrations are in process. Not investment advice.