Money-Weighted Rate of Return (MWRR)

MWRR (also called IRR - Internal Rate of Return) is a compound growth rate. That’s it.

If your MWRR is 15%, your money is growing at 15% per year. This is likely the most important information you need about your investments.

What MWRR Tells You

MWRR answers the question: “At what rate is my money actually growing?”

Unlike simple percentage gains, MWRR factors in when you added or withdrew funds. If you invested more right before a market dip, your MWRR will reflect that unfortunate timing. If you added funds before a rally, you’ll see the benefit.

This makes MWRR personal to you - two investors with the same asset but different contribution patterns will have different MWRR values.

Why MWRR Matters

For each individual asset in NetFiscus, you can see its MWRR derived from your value updates and cash flows. On your dashboard, you can see the MWRR for your entire portfolio.

This gives you a clear picture of how your wealth is actually growing - accounting for all the deposits, withdrawals, dividends, and value changes along the way.

A Simple Example

You invest $100 in the stock market. It grows by 10% in one year to $110. Your MWRR is 10%.

But what if halfway through the year you deposited an additional $50? Did you add that money when the market was low (good timing) or high (bad timing)? Your MWRR captures this - it might be higher or lower than 10% depending on your timing.

The TWR (Time-Weighted Return) would still show 10% because it measures the investment’s performance, not yours.

When MWRR Matters Most

MWRR is particularly useful when:

  • You want to know your actual compound growth rate
  • You make regular contributions (like monthly investments)
  • You’ve made significant deposits or withdrawals
  • You want to understand how your timing decisions affected your returns
  • You’re evaluating your overall wealth-building progress

How NetFiscus Calculates MWRR

NetFiscus uses the XIRR (Extended Internal Rate of Return) algorithm to calculate MWRR. This considers:

  • Every deposit you made (and when you made it)
  • Every withdrawal you took (and when you took it)
  • Dividends and income received
  • The current value of your asset

The result is an annualized percentage representing your personal compound growth rate.

MWRR vs TWR

While MWRR measures YOUR growth rate (including timing decisions), TWR (Time-Weighted Return) measures the ASSET’s performance (independent of your cash flows).

AspectMWRRTWR
MeasuresYour compound growth rateAsset’s pure performance
Affected by timingYesNo
Answers“How fast is my money growing?”“How did this investment perform?”

NetFiscus focuses on MWRR because it answers the question most investors actually care about: “How fast is my money growing?” While TWR is useful for comparing fund managers or benchmarking investments, MWRR reflects your real wealth-building progress.

Requirements for Calculation

NetFiscus needs at least two data points on different dates to calculate MWRR. The more history you have, the more meaningful the calculation becomes.

If you see a blank MWRR value, add more historical data or record additional value updates and cash flows.

See Also