by Mark » Fri Nov 28, 2014 9:09 am
Hi El Wealtho,
That definition doesn't say they are "accounted" for, it factors them out. It does this by creating multiple time periods between each external flow, and calculating the returns of each of these periods, and then combining all the periods together. Each Ri term is created between external cash flows, so they are factored out. Let's take an example:
Started with 10 shares at $100/share
Received a distribution of $100 dividend for $1/share while share price was still $100/share
Say the end price ends up at $115/share
Look at 2 cases, one where you took out the dividend, and one where you reinvested it:
1) Distributed:
You had an external cash flow, so there will be 2 components:
Cash Flow Period 0:
BMVi: 1000.000000 EMVi: 1100.000000 Yieldi: 10.00
Cash Flow Period 1:
BMVi: 1000.000000 EMVi: 1150.000000 Yieldi: 15.00
Total Yield: 26.50
2) Reinvested:
There was no external flow, everything stayed in the investment, so there only needs to be 1 component:
Cash Flow Period 0:
BMVi: 1000.000000 EMVi: 1265.000000 Yieldi: 26.50
Total Yield: 26.50
Notice, the resulting Total Yield is the same, either way. Also, notice in case 1, the EMVi for the first period included the value of the distribution, before it was removed. The BMVi for the second period, excluded the value of the distribution, after it was removed. All the BMV/EMV for each period have no external flows in them, so the BMV to EMV changes are due only to performance, and not any money being added/removed.