When you want to know the average returns of a stock, bond, mutual fund, or exchange-traded fund (ETF), you can use the TTM to see how it has done. But what does that mean, and how does it help you as an investor? Learn more about the TTM and how to use it when looking at a stock, bond, or fund.
TTM Yield Definition and Calculation
The trailing 12-month yield is the average return a fund gave over the past 12 months. It differs from the returns that one stock gives. Returns on single stocks are calculated by dividing the total returns the stock paid out by the stock’s market price. There are two ways to calculate a fund’s TTM yield. First, you can use the weighted average of the yields of the holdings (i.e., stocks, bonds, or other funds) in the fund or ETF. To get the TTM this way, you need to add 12 months’ worth of returns for each type of holding that is in the fund. Multiply each total by the percentage of the fund that type makes up. Add the results, and you have the trailing 12-month yield of the fund.
How to Analyze a Mutual Fund’s TTM Yield
The TTM yield provides recent data from a fund’s average returns and interest payouts. For instance, suppose you’re looking at a fund, and you see that its TTM yield is 3.00%. You know this is an average, so you can tell that the fund would average $3,000 for every $100,000 you had in it over the last 12 months. With this method, you’ve only seen the average returns for the last year. Using the TTM yield, there is no way of telling how the fund will do in the future. No fund has the same returns every year; it is highly unlikely that TTM yield results will be the same, because there are too many factors that affect returns. Therefore, the TTM yield shouldn’t be used to pick a fund unless you’re using it along with other ratios to compare funds.
SEC Yield
The SEC yield is another way to see how a fund is doing. You can use the SEC yield as a way to try and guess the near-term returns if market conditions remain the same. The SEC yield uses returns from the previous month to achieve the result, which means it is a much more recent picture of a fund’s current returns. It can also give you an idea of how it might perform over the next 30 days if all other market factors remain the same.
Outlook on Yields for Bond Funds
Returns from stock and bond funds have been fairly low in recent times. Therefore, it is likely that the long-term trend would be for rates and returns on bonds to rise from these lows. It is worth noting that bond returns are also subject to many factors. Bond fund returns rose in 2018 but dropped in 2019; they dropped significantly in 2020. In the first half of 2021, returns began to climb back up to pre-pandemic levels.
The Bottom Line
Most of the time, the people looking at trailing 12-month fund returns are searching for steady income rather than growth. The TTM yield is one way you can see how a fund has performed over 12 months. If you’re looking for a way to estimate the returns a specific fund will give you over time, the TTM yield is not a reliable way to gauge your future returns. The fund can go through portfolio changes, or the underlying asset prices could drop. When used with other ratios and measurements, the TTM yield can help you decide whether a fund is worth buying.