Skip to main content
Skip to main content
DigiCalcs

learn.howToCalculate

learn.whatIsHeading

Real return adjusts investment gains for inflation to show the actual increase in purchasing power. The Fisher equation is exact; nominal minus inflation is the common approximation.

ସୂତ୍ର

Real return = Nominal return − Inflation rate (simplified); Exact: (1 + Nominal) / (1 + Inflation) − 1
Rnom
Nominal annual return (Percentage)
Rinf
Inflation rate (Percentage)
Rreal
Real return (inflation-adjusted) (Percentage)

ଷ୍ଟେପ୍-ଷ୍ଟେପ୍ ଗାଇଡ୍ |

  1. 1Fisher: Real = (1+Nominal)/(1+Inflation) − 1
  2. 2Approximation: Real ≈ Nominal − Inflation
  3. 38% nominal at 3% inflation → 4.85% real (not 5%)
  4. 4Always compare investments using real returns

ସମାଧାନ ହୋଇଥିବା ଉଦାହରଣ

ଇନପୁଟ୍
Nominal 8%, inflation 3%
ଫଳ
Real return = (1.08/1.03)−1 = 4.85%

ବାରମ୍ବାର ଜିଜ୍ଞାସା

Why does inflation matter?

If you earn 5% return but inflation is 3%, real wealth gain is only ~1.9% (not 2%). Over 30 years, that 1.1% difference compounds massively—huge impact on retirement plans.

Can real return be negative?

Yes. If bonds yield 3% and inflation is 4%, real return is −1%. You're losing purchasing power. Cash in high-inflation environment is a store of negative value.

How do I protect against inflation?

Equities historically beat inflation. TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) adjust principal for inflation. Real estate appreciates with inflation. Avoid pure cash/bonds long-term.

ସେଟିଂ