
Average Annual Yield
The average yield on an investment or a portfolio is the sum of all interest, dividends, or other income that the investment generates, divided by the age of the investment or the length of time the investor has held it. Popular versions of average annual yields include annual percentage yield, seven-day yield, tax-equivalent yield, and stock dividend yield. The investor’s average annual yield is 11%, or ((10% + 15% + 8%) / 3). Average annual yield is often beneficial to assess a portfolio of mixed investments. There are a variety of yield measurements that apply to many fixed income and money market securities. For example, for a savings account that pays a floating rate of interest on balances, the average annual yield can be calculated by adding all interest payments for the year and dividing that number by the average balance for the year. The tax-equivalent yield fairly compares the yield of a tax-free bond to that of a taxable bond and is also known as after-tax yield.

What Is the Average Annual Yield?
The average yield on an investment or a portfolio is the sum of all interest, dividends, or other income that the investment generates, divided by the age of the investment or the length of time the investor has held it. In particular, it’s the yield or total income generated from an investment, divided by the number of years held.



Understanding the Average Annual Yield
The average annual yield is a particularly useful tool for floating-rate investments, in which the fund's balance and/or the interest rate change frequently. The average annual yield can also apply to a range of other investments, from deposit accounts, stocks, commodities, and/or real estate.
For example, for a savings account that pays a floating rate of interest on balances, the average annual yield can be calculated by adding all interest payments for the year and dividing that number by the average balance for the year.
The average annual yield is a backward-looking measurement and can also be very useful in determining the actual performance of a mixture of investments. In general, the average annual yield will determine performance over time on any multi-year investment.
Say an investor owns a portfolio of stocks, where they generate a return of $1,000 on a $10,000 net valuation during year one. Then, the return is $1,500 on the same investment amount in year two, and $800 on the same investment in year three.
The return on year one was thus 10%, 15% in year two, and 8% in year three. The investor’s average annual yield is 11%, or ((10% + 15% + 8%) / 3).
Average annual yield is often beneficial to assess a portfolio of mixed investments.
Types of Average Annual Yield
There are a variety of yield measurements that apply to many fixed income and money market securities. For example, the annual percentage yield or APY measures an investment’s effective annual rate of return, taking into account the effect of compounding interest and assuming a full 365 holding period. A seven-day yield is the annualized yield for a money market mutual fund, calculated based on the fund’s average seven-day distribution.
For bonds, common yield terms include the current yield, which is a bond’s interest rate as a percentage of its current price. The yield to maturity (YTM) estimates what an investor will receive if they held the bond to its maturity date. A tax-equivalent (TE) yield also refers to many non-taxable municipal bonds. The tax-equivalent yield fairly compares the yield of a tax-free bond to that of a taxable bond and is also known as after-tax yield.
Dividend-paying stocks also have a variety of yield measurements or stock dividend yields. The yield on cost, for example, is a security’s annual dividend rate, divided by its average cost basis. Many companies, particularly older and more stable ones, pay out a portion of their earnings as dividends. Investors who seek out high yields for retirement income seek out and regularly calculate these yields. At times yields may become too high, however, implying that a company is over-extending itself.
Related terms:
Annual Percentage Yield (APY)
The annual percentage yield (APY) is the effective rate of return on an investment for one year taking into account the effect of compounding interest. read more
Average Balance
The average balance is the balance on a loan or deposit account averaged over a given period, typically calculated on a daily or monthly basis. read more
Average Price
Average price is the mean price of an asset or security observed over some period of time. read more
Bond Yield : Formula & Calculation
Bond yield is the amount of return an investor will realize on a bond, calculated by dividing its face value by the amount of interest it pays. read more
Compound Interest , Formula, & Calculation
Compound interest is the interest on a loan or deposit that accrues on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. read more
Cost Basis
Cost basis is the original value of an asset for tax purposes, adjusted for stock splits, dividends and return of capital distributions. read more
Current Yield
Current yield is the annual income (interest or dividends) divided by the current price of the security. read more
Deposit
A deposit is both a transfer of funds to another party for safekeeping and the portion of funds used as collateral for the delivery of a good. read more
Dividend Rate
The dividend is the percentage of a security's price paid out as dividend income to investors. read more