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Time-Weighted Return (TWR)

Written by Blazej Kupec
Last updated June 23, 2026
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6 mins

What is the time-weighted return (TWR)?

The time-weighted return (TWR), also called the time-weighted rate of return, measures how an investment portfolio has performed over time while removing the effect of money flowing in and out of it. It strips out the impact of capital calls and distributions so that the figure reflects the performance of the underlying investments alone, not the timing or size of an investor's contributions.

This is what makes TWR useful for judging a manager or a strategy. A portfolio's value can rise simply because an investor added capital, or fall because they withdrew it. Neither tells you whether the investments themselves did well. By isolating market and selection performance, TWR answers a cleaner question: how did the portfolio grow, dollar for dollar, over the period?

TWR is the performance standard for vehicles where the manager does not control the cash flows: public funds, indices, and, in private markets, evergreen or open-ended structures. It contrasts with money-weighted measures such as the internal rate of return (IRR), which deliberately factor those flows in.

Key takeaways

  • TWR measures the compound growth of a portfolio while removing the distorting effect of external cash flows.
  • TWR isolates investment performance by measuring returns between capital calls and distributions, keeping the timing of those flows out of the figure.
  • In private markets, closed-ended funds report IRR; evergreen and open-ended funds typically report TWR. The two answer different questions.
  • TWR says nothing about how much capital was actually deployed or how well an individual investor timed their entry. For that, you need a money-weighted measure like IRR
  • Because it isolates the manager's performance, TWR is the standard prescribed by the GIPS (Global Investment Performance Standards) framework in most cases.

How time-weighted return works

The mechanics rest on a single idea: every time money enters or leaves the portfolio, the clock resets.

Each external cash flow (a contribution, a withdrawal, a subscription, a redemption) marks the end of one sub-period and the start of the next. Within each sub-period, the portfolio's return is calculated on its own. The sub-period returns are then multiplied together, or "geometrically linked", to give the return for the whole period. This compounding is why TWR is sometimes called the geometric mean return.

The point of resetting at each flow is to value the portfolio immediately before new money distorts the picture. A capital call or a large deposit changes the size of the portfolio without saying anything about its performance. By cutting the timeline at that moment and measuring each slice separately, TWR keeps those flows out of the result. Sub-period valuations rely on the portfolio's net asset value (NAV) at each cut-off.

Time-weighted return formula and calculation

The cumulative TWR is the product of one plus each sub-period return, minus one:

TWR formula

Where:

  • R₁ … Rₙ are the returns for each sub-period
  • n is the number of sub-periods

Each sub-period return is calculated as:

TWR subperiod formula

The steps are straightforward:

  1. Divide the full period into sub-periods, drawing a line at each cash flow.
  2. Calculate the return for each sub-period using the formula above.
  3. Multiply (1 + Rₙ) for every sub-period together.
  4. Subtract one to express the result as a return.

This gives a cumulative return for the whole period. To compare across periods of different lengths, you can annualise it separately: TWR (annualised) = (1 + TWR)^(1/y) − 1, where y is the number of years. Annualisation is an optional final step, not part of the core calculation.

Time-weighted return example

The following figures are illustrative only. Suppose an investor starts the year with a portfolio worth $100,000.

  • By 30 June, before any new money is added, it is worth $110,000. The first sub-period return is (110,000 − 100,000) ÷ 100,000 = 10%.
  • On 1 July, the investor contributes a further $50,000, taking the balance to $160,000.
  • By 31 December, the portfolio is worth $152,000. The second sub-period return is (152,000 − 160,000) ÷ 160,000 = −5%.

Linking the two sub-periods:

TWR = [(1 + 0.10) × (1 − 0.05)] − 1 = (1.10 × 0.95) − 1 = 0.045 = 4.5%

The $50,000 arrived just before the portfolio declined, but it does not drag the TWR down. That is the whole point: TWR measures how the investments performed in each period, up 10% then down 5%, independent of the fact that a larger sum happened to be exposed to the second, weaker period.

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TWR vs IRR

The contribution's timing is exactly what a money-weighted measure such as IRR is designed to capture. Run the same flows through an IRR calculation, with $100,000 invested at the start, a further $50,000 mid-year, and $152,000 at the end, and the result is markedly lower, around 1.6%.

Why the gap? More of the investor's capital was at work during the losing second half. The time-weighted view (4.5%) reflects the portfolio's performance; the money-weighted view (≈1.6%) reflects the investor's actual outcome, given when and how much they put in. Neither is wrong. They answer different questions:

  • Use TWR to judge the manager or strategy: the performance the portfolio delivered, regardless of investor behaviour.
  • Use IRR to judge the realised outcome: what an investor actually earned on the capital they deployed, timing included.

IRR is the same idea as the money-weighted rate of return. For investments with irregular flows, the modified internal rate of return (MIRR) refines it further by applying separate financing and reinvestment rates.

Why evergreen and open-ended funds report TWR

In private markets, the metric a fund reports depends on its structure, and this is where TWR earns its place alongside IRR.

Closed-ended funds report IRR. Capital is called gradually over the investment period, so the timing of those calls and of later distributions matters a great deal. IRR captures that timing, including the J-curve, the early dip when fees and unrealised holdings weigh on returns before exits begin to materialise.

Evergreen and open-ended funds report TWR instead, and for good reason. These structures put capital to work from the first subscription, price their NAV continuously, and reinvest gains inside the vehicle. TWR's underlying assumption of continuous full investment actually holds. Investor subscriptions and redemptions happen at periodic windows on the investor's own timing, so stripping those flows out leaves a clean measure of how the fund itself performed.

That leaves a practical question: how do you compare a closed-ended fund reported on IRR with an evergreen fund reported on TWR? Here, the multiple on invested capital (MOIC), ending value divided by total capital invested, provides a common benchmark that is independent of cash-flow timing. In short: TWR for evergreens, IRR for closed-ended funds, and MOIC as the timing-neutral comparator across both.


Why TWR matters and where it's used

TWR is the international standard for reporting and comparing investment performance. The Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS), maintained by the CFA Institute, prescribe it for managed products precisely because it removes the cash-flow effects that managers do not control fully. Market indices are quoted on the same basis, which is what allows a like-for-like comparison between a fund and its benchmark, the same comparability that underpins measures such as the public market equivalent (PME).

For investors, the practical value is consistency. Because TWR is calculated the same way regardless of who contributed what and when, it lets you compare two managers, or a manager against an index, on equal terms.

Limitations of TWR

TWR is not the right tool for every question.

  • It is data-intensive. A new sub-period and valuation are needed at every cash flow, which becomes cumbersome where flows are frequent. In practice it is calculated by reporting software, not by hand.
  • It ignores how much capital was deployed. A high TWR on a small position and on a large one look identical, even though the dollar outcomes differ enormously.
  • It does not reflect investor timing. TWR will not tell an investor what they actually earned. For closed-ended private equity, where the timing of capital calls and distributions is central, IRR remains the more informative measure.

Frequently asked questions

Is a higher time-weighted return better? Generally yes. A higher TWR means stronger compound performance over the period. But always compare it against a relevant benchmark and over the same time horizon, and remember it says nothing about how much capital was at work.

Is TWR annualised? Not by default. The core formula produces a cumulative return for the whole period. Annualisation is a separate, optional step used to compare periods of different lengths.

What is the difference between TWR and CAGR? Both express compound growth. TWR is built to handle external cash flows by linking sub-periods, whereas a compound annual growth rate typically assumes a single sum left untouched between two dates.

Why don't closed-ended private equity funds use TWR? Because the timing of capital calls and distributions is central to those funds' returns, and TWR deliberately removes it. IRR keeps that timing in, which is why it is the standard for drawdown structures.

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Authors
Blazej Kupec
Senior Content Manager
Blazej Kupec
Blazej is a senior content manager at Moonfare. With ten years of experience in financial media, he now covers trends and developments in private equity. Blazej especially enjoys creating content that helps people better understand the intricacies of the asset class. He holds a BSc in Political Science from the University of Ljubljana.
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