CAGR: Difference between revisions

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Expand the page and extend examples and interpretation.)
imported>Doug Williamson
(Note expressly that the 2-year period is historical.)
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During this particular 2-year period, sales were growing at an average rate of 22.5% per annum.
During this particular 2-year historical period, sales were growing at an average rate of 22.5% per annum.


However, this is not evidence about any other periods, particularly not future periods.
However, this is not evidence about any other periods, particularly not future periods.

Revision as of 19:15, 14 November 2015

Compound Annual Growth Rate.


The compound annual growth rate is calculated from total growth over a longer period as:

CAGR = ( End amount / Starting amount )(1/n) - 1

Where:

n = number of years between the two points sampled


Example 1

Sales have grown from $100m to $150m over the most recent 2-year period.

The CAGR is:

= ( 150 / 100 )(1/2) - 1

= 22.5%.


During this particular 2-year historical period, sales were growing at an average rate of 22.5% per annum.

However, this is not evidence about any other periods, particularly not future periods.


Example 2

The same formula can be used to calculate a compound annual growth rate, based on a shorter sampling period.

Sales grew from $100m to $115m over a historical period of 3 months (= 0.25 years).

The CAGR caclulated from this data is:

= ( 115 / 100 )(1/0.25 = 4) - 1

= 74.9%.


During this particular 3-month period, sales grew at a rate of 74.9% per annum.

On its own, this is NOT evidence that sales will continue to grow at this rate during the remaining 9 months of the year, nor indeed in any other period.

Proper use of this kind of analysis will investigate the reasons for the figures, and then respond appropriately.


See also