Gain Graph
This graph displays the value gained by the investment versus
time. Gain since the starting graph date (inclusive) is plotted.
Gain is calculated as the investment value minus the out of pocket investment (cost). This out of
pocket investment can be either the cost of the currently owned
shares, or the historical cost of the investment. The menu command
controls which type of cost is used in the gain calculation. With
the historical cost mode enabled, the gain for the entire history
of the investment is plotted. With the current cost mode enabled,
the gain of only the currently held shares is plotted. This is the
equivalent of plotting the change in space between the value and
cost lines on the Cost - Value
Graph. You may wish to look at the gain in the historical cost
mode to see how well you are doing for the life of the investment,
and look at the gain in the current cost mode to see how well you
are doing for the remaining balance of shares.
The historical cost is the net sum of money that has come out of
your pocket over the life of the investment. The historical out of
pocket investment is calculated by adding all purchases,
subtracting all redemptions, and subtracting all received
distributions. The purchases only include out of pocket purchases,
not reinvested distributions. The received distributions only
include distributions paid to you, not reinvested distributions.
This cost is the break even point on your invested money for the
full history of the investment. The historical out of pocket
investment is calculated with the formula:
out_of_pocket_investment = purchases - redemptions -
received_distributions
The current cost is the net sum of money that has come out of
your pocket in order to acquire the shares currently held in the
investment. The current out of pocket investment is calculated by
adding up the cost to purchase all the currently owned shares, and
subtracting off any received distributions from the currently owned
shares. The first in first out method is used for determining this
cost. The purchases only include out of pocket purchases, not
reinvested distributions. The received distributions only include
distributions paid to you, not reinvested distributions. This cost
is the break even point on your invested money for the remaining
balance of shares currently held. The current out of pocket
investment is calculated with the formula:
out_of_pocket_investment = latest_purchases -
received_distributions
An example will help clarify this historical/current cost
option. Suppose you started a new investment by buying 100 shares
at $10/share for $1,000. After this transaction your out of pocket
cost for this investment is $1,000 in either cost mode. If you then
sold 50 of these shares at $11/share for $550, your cost for this
investment in the historical mode would be $450, and in the
currently owned shares mode it would be $500. At $11/shares, your
gain in the historical cost mode would then be $100 ($50 that you
made on the sold shares, plus the $50 you are ahead on the unsold
shares), where as in the current cost mode your gain would be $50
(which is just the $50 you are ahead on the unsold shares).
Continuing this example even further, if the price went up to $12
share while you still owned the 50 shares, your gain in the
historical cost mode would be $150 (the $50 gain from the sold
shares, plus the $100 you are ahead on the unsold shares), where as
in the current cost mode, your gain would be $100 (the $100 you are
ahead on the unsold shares).
The vertical axis is value gained. The horizontal axis displays
the date. If auto-scaling is on the vertical axis automatically
scales to cover from the minimum to the maximum achieved during the
displayed period. The top vertical axis label will specify the
maximum, and the bottom vertical axis label will specify the
minimum achieved during the displayed period.
The graph will be labeled with GAIN-H or GAIN-C in
either historical (-H) or current (-C) cost mode. The
ending gain value will be displayed on the legend and will be
labeled with G: (Gain). The change in gain from the previous
day is also displayed in parenthesis.
If the yields are turned on () they will be displayed above the graphs. See
Yield Calculations for information on the
reported yields.
See Also
About Graphs
Changing Date Range
Changing Vertical Scale
Mouse Commands
Keyboard Shortcuts
Display Options Dialog
Cursor Types
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