Below [chart availabe in paper],
we show cumulative return obtained in our back test of each dividend yield and payout ratio portfolios.
A compilation of «self - managed» accounts over the same period
showed a cumulative return of 59.4 percent, losing to the market by 20 percent, and to the machines by almost 25 percent.
The blue line
shows the cumulative return of the S&P 500 restricted to only the 10 - week period following the above signals, provided that our measures market internals or credit spreads were also hostile at the time.
A compilation of all self - managed accounts for the two year period
showed a cumulative return of 59.4 % after all expenses.
A compilation of «self - managed» accounts over the same period
showed a cumulative return of 59.4 percent, losing to the market by 20 percent, and to the machines by almost 25 percent.
A compilation of «self - managed» accounts (the humans) over the same period
showed a cumulative return of 59.4 percent, losing to the market by 20 percent, and to the machines by almost 25 percent.
Not exact matches
Here are the companies that have
shown the highest total
cumulative return over the last five years:
The lines
show the
cumulative total
return in the S&P 500 Index in all strictly negative market
return / risk profiles we identify, partitioned by whether the S&P 500 was above or below its 200 - day average at the time.
To bring the current situation up to date, the chart below
shows the
cumulative total
return of the S&P 500 Index, restricted to the 8 % of history that matches the prospective market
return / risk classification that we presently identify.
The chart
shows the estimated
cumulative impact of an at - the - money S&P 500 index put option under various market
return / risk classifications we identify.
Cumulative total
return shows the change in the investment's value over the time period indicated.
To provide some insight into why we consider present conditions so hostile, the chart below
shows the
cumulative total
return of the S&P 500 under a variety of classifications of varying severity.
As the chart
shows, the gold - colored line depicting the
cumulative returns achieved on Mondays suffered a steady decline over many years.
Figure 1, which
shows the trends in average
return on invested capital (ROIC) and
cumulative after - tax operating profit (NOPAT) for the sector over the past few years, clearly
shows that profits are flat to down and not driving stock valuations higher.
The difference of
returns of the fund and its reference portfolio constitutes the
cumulative RealAlpha ™, which is
shown in the following chart:
The top section
shows the hypothetical
cumulative returns of the value approach versus the S&P 500 total
return (i.e., price appreciation plus dividends) between 1962 and September 2015.
Yields,
cumulative income and total
return shown do not reflect the effect fees imposed by an investment manager nor does it reflect the impact of taxes.
Cumulative total
return shows the change in the investment's value over the time period indicated.
The chart below
shows the
cumulative excess
return (that is,
return above cash) of this variation of the strategy versus the market.
The chart
shows the estimated
cumulative impact of an at - the - money S&P 500 index put option under various market
return / risk classifications we identify.
Exhibit 1
shows the
cumulative total
return for our two - factor model versus the broad market.
Figure 1 from the paper
shows cumulative abnormal
returns around corporate social responsibility engagements (click to enlarge):
Exhibit 1
shows the difference in the
Cumulative return of Growth and Value strategies over the past twenty years.
You might think that is a miniscule number, but as this example from Value Research
shows, Rs. 1 Lakh over 10 years with a
return of 15 % per annum and a 1.5 % expense ratio grows only to Rs. 3.55 Lakh, instead of the Rs. 4.05 Lakh that it could have grown to — a
cumulative difference of 14 %!
For funds with less than one year of performance,
returns shown are
cumulative rather than annualized.
The graph and table below
show the
cumulative total
return of eleven different value - weighted sub-portfolios - stocks that do not pay a dividend, and then ten deciles ranking dividend yield from lowest to highest.
Figure 2
shows the drawdowns of the long / short strategies (top panel) and the worst
cumulative under performance of the long - only strategies relative to the market, i.e., the drawdowns on the long - only strategies» active
returns (bottom panel).
25 years of neuter /
return has effect comparable to reducing average litter size from four kittens to one MOUNT RANIER, Maryland ---- The largest
return of data yet from a national survey of cat rescue and sterilization programs
shows a
cumulative reduction of 72 % in kitten births at monitored colonies since the introduction of neuter /
return feral cat -LSB-...]
The near - linear rate of anthropogenic warming (predominantly from anthropogenic greenhouse gases) is
shown in sources such as: «Deducing Multidecadal Anthropogenic Global Warming Trends Using Multiple Regression Analysis» «The global warming hiatus — a natural product of interactions of a secular warming trend and a multi-decadal oscillation» «The Origin and Limits of the Near Proportionality between Climate Warming and
Cumulative CO2 Emissions» «Sensitivity of climate to cumulative carbon emissions due to compensation of ocean heat and carbon uptake» «Return periods of global climate fluctuations and the pause» «Using data to attribute episodes of warming and cooling in instrumental records» «The proportionality of global warming to cumulative carbon emissions» «The sensitivity of the proportionality between temperature change and cumulative CO2 emissions to ocean mix
Cumulative CO2 Emissions» «Sensitivity of climate to
cumulative carbon emissions due to compensation of ocean heat and carbon uptake» «Return periods of global climate fluctuations and the pause» «Using data to attribute episodes of warming and cooling in instrumental records» «The proportionality of global warming to cumulative carbon emissions» «The sensitivity of the proportionality between temperature change and cumulative CO2 emissions to ocean mix
cumulative carbon emissions due to compensation of ocean heat and carbon uptake» «
Return periods of global climate fluctuations and the pause» «Using data to attribute episodes of warming and cooling in instrumental records» «The proportionality of global warming to
cumulative carbon emissions» «The sensitivity of the proportionality between temperature change and cumulative CO2 emissions to ocean mix
cumulative carbon emissions» «The sensitivity of the proportionality between temperature change and
cumulative CO2 emissions to ocean mix
cumulative CO2 emissions to ocean mixing»