Mark wrote:Hi Ralph,
I didn't quite follow your situation, but let me explain how the plotted price is calculated when there are fees involved. Let's say you bought 10 shares at a price of $5/share, plus you paid $35 in commission. You paid $85 in total, which if you divide that by 10 shares comes out to paying $8.50/share, so the buy marker will be plotted at $8.50 in this example.
There is no option to turn this off, it always plots at the purchase price per share, including any commission fees.
Is this still the case? It also applies to Sell markers? Why does FM do this? How does this affect the ROI calculation?
It seems it would be better to plot the
actual purchase and selling price. Why. Because the way FM does it confuses the issue. eg. Graph plots
actual most recent (typically closing) prices, FM plots marker at
adjusted transaction price ... the two are not directly comparable and the marker placement can be misleading.
Is there a reason for not plotting the actual transaction price and accounting for the commission elsewhere?
Thx
PS. When establishing a new investment there is a box in which one may enter a "Commission Fee".
How does what is entered here affect subsequent plotting and yield calculations, if at all?
How is that dialog box revisited (to change the Commission Fee value)?
PPS Perhaps if i explain one of the ways I use FM yield calculations it will clarify what I am after ...
For each investment there may be a target Annualized ROI at which to sell. FM seems helpful in tracking this.
Just need to know whether Commission Fees (Purchase? Purchase and Selling?) are included in FM ROI Yields. (Idea: could TWR be used in some cases, assuming CFs are not included in that Yield formula.)
Many thx.