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What is Money-Weighted Return (MWR)?

May 17, 2025OnePortfolio Team
What is Money-Weighted Return (MWR)?

Money-Weighted Return (MWR) is a performance metric that measures your portfolio’s actual rate of return, taking into account both the timing and size of cash flows. Unlike other return metrics, MWR reflects the impact of your decisions about when to add or withdraw money from your investments.

Think of MWR as your personal investment scorecard—it shows exactly how your money performed based on when you invested it, not just how the underlying investments performed.

What is Money-Weighted Return (MWR)?

Money-Weighted Return represents the rate of return that equates the initial value of an investment plus all cash flows to the ending value. It’s called “money-weighted” because larger cash flows have more influence on the calculation than smaller ones.

For example, if you invested heavily just before a market downturn, your MWR would be lower than someone who invested the same total amount but did so after the downturn. This makes MWR particularly useful for evaluating your personal investment experience.

Key characteristics of MWR:

  • Accounts for the size and timing of all cash flows
  • Reflects your actual investment experience
  • Heavily influenced by when you add or withdraw money
  • Provides a personalized performance metric

How Do You Calculate Money-Weighted Returns?

The MWR calculation finds the discount rate that makes the present value of all cash flows equal to zero. Here’s the formula:

MWR Formula:

0 = CF₀ + CF₁/(1+r) + CF₂/(1+r)² + ... + CFₙ/(1+r)ⁿ

Where:

  • CF₀ = Initial investment (negative value)
  • CF₁, CF₂, … CFₙ = Cash flows at different time periods
  • r = Money-weighted return (what we’re solving for)
  • n = Number of periods

Practical Calculation Steps:

  1. List all cash flows with their dates
  2. Assign negative values to investments (money in)
  3. Assign positive values to withdrawals and ending value (money out)
  4. Use iterative methods or financial calculators to solve for r

Example Calculation:

Let’s say you have the following investment scenario:

  • January 1: Invest $10,000
  • July 1: Invest additional $5,000
  • December 31: Portfolio value is $17,000

The equation becomes:

0 = -10,000 + (-5,000)/(1+r)^0.5 + 17,000/(1+r)^1

Solving for r gives you an MWR of approximately 11.6%.

Is a Money-Weighted Return the Same as an IRR?

Yes, Money-Weighted Return is mathematically identical to Internal Rate of Return (IRR). Both calculations:

  • Use the same formula
  • Account for cash flow timing and size
  • Solve for the discount rate that sets net present value to zero
  • Produce the same result given identical inputs

The terminology difference exists mainly due to context:

  • “IRR” is commonly used in corporate finance and project evaluation
  • “MWR” is the preferred term in portfolio management and personal investing

Both terms describe the same concept: the annualized rate of return that accounts for all cash flows into and out of an investment.

What is the Difference Between Time-Weighted and Money-Weighted Returns?

The key distinction between Time-Weighted Return (TWR) and Money-Weighted Return lies in how they handle cash flows:

Time-Weighted Return (TWR)

  • Measures the compound rate of growth of $1 invested
  • Eliminates the impact of cash flows
  • Shows pure investment performance
  • Used for manager evaluation
  • Not affected by investor timing decisions

Money-Weighted Return (MWR)

  • Measures your actual investment experience
  • Includes the impact of cash flow timing
  • Shows personal portfolio performance
  • Used for individual investor analysis
  • Heavily influenced by when you invest

When to Use Each:

Use TWR when:

  • Evaluating fund manager performance
  • Comparing different investment options
  • You want to eliminate timing effects
  • Benchmarking against market indices

Use MWR when:

  • Measuring your personal investment results
  • Evaluating overall portfolio performance
  • Cash flow timing is within your control
  • Understanding your actual returns

Example Comparison:

Consider this scenario:

  • Year 1: Portfolio grows from $100 to $110 (+10%)
  • Start of Year 2: You add $1,000
  • Year 2: Portfolio grows from $1,110 to $1,221 (+10%)

TWR = 10% annualized (geometric average of periodic returns) MWR = 10.02% (slightly higher due to good timing of the large cash inflow)

If the market had declined in Year 2, the MWR would be lower than TWR, penalizing the poor timing of the cash flow.

Practical Applications of MWR

Personal Portfolio Evaluation

MWR is ideal for assessing your actual investment experience, especially when you make regular contributions or withdrawals. It helps answer: “How much money did I actually make?”

Dollar-Cost Averaging Analysis

When implementing systematic investment strategies, MWR reveals whether your timing helped or hurt your returns compared to a lump-sum investment.

Retirement Planning

For retirement accounts with regular contributions, MWR provides a realistic view of your accumulation phase performance, essential for understanding your portfolio’s risk metrics.

Performance Attribution

By comparing MWR to TWR, you can determine whether your timing decisions added or subtracted value from your portfolio returns.

Limitations of Money-Weighted Returns

While MWR is valuable, it has limitations:

  1. Not Suitable for Comparisons: Different investors’ MWRs aren’t comparable due to varying cash flow patterns

  2. Timing Dependency: Results heavily depend on market conditions when cash flows occur

  3. Complex Calculations: Requires iterative solving methods for accurate results

  4. Short-Term Bias: Can be misleading over short periods with volatile markets

  5. No Benchmarking: Cannot be directly compared to market indices that use TWR

Best Practices for Using MWR

To effectively use Money-Weighted Returns:

  1. Track All Cash Flows: Maintain accurate records of deposits, withdrawals, and dates

  2. Use Appropriate Time Frames: Longer periods provide more meaningful results

  3. Compare with TWR: Understanding both metrics gives complete performance insight

  4. Consider Risk-Adjustment: Combine MWR with risk-adjusted return measures for comprehensive analysis

  5. Regular Monitoring: Calculate MWR periodically to track your investment journey

Conclusion

Money-Weighted Return provides investors with a personalized performance metric that reflects their actual investment experience. While it’s mathematically equivalent to IRR, MWR’s focus on portfolio management makes it invaluable for individual investors seeking to understand their true returns.

Remember that MWR tells your unique investment story—it captures not just what you invested in, but when you made those investment decisions. Used alongside Time-Weighted Returns and other performance metrics, MWR completes the picture of your portfolio’s performance.

Track your portfolio’s Returns alongside other crucial performance metrics. Try OnePortfolio Free to see your complete investment picture.

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