I noticed that many people in the crypto community get confused when assessing the actual returns of their positions. Here’s the point — you need to look not just at the final percentage, but understand how exactly your investments are growing or falling( year after year.



This metric is called the compound annual growth rate, and it really helps you see the real picture. Unlike a simple profit calculation, it takes compound interest into account — when your profit starts generating profit on its own. This is a key point that many people miss.

The formula looks like this: take the ending value, divide it by the starting value, raise it to the power of ) divided by the number of years(, and subtract one. It sounds complicated, but in practice it’s just simple. For example, if your investment grew from 1000 to 2000 over two years, you’ll get an annual growth rate of about 41%. This doesn’t mean that every year was +41% — it’s a representative figure that shows how fast your position was working on average.

Why does this matter? Because this metric gives you one number for comparison. Instead of having to figure out volatility and price swings, you see an averaged growth picture. This is especially useful when you need to compare multiple assets or evaluate how effective your strategy has been over the past few years.

For long-term crypto investing, this is simply necessary. Instead of panicking over short-term drawdowns, look at the average annual rate over several years — it will give you a real understanding of whether your strategy is working or not. On Gate, you can track this metric for your portfolio if you keep records.
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