Rate of Return

In AP Macro, the rate of return is the profit or loss a financial asset generates, expressed as a percentage of its initial cost. Along with liquidity and risk, it's one of the three attributes you use to compare financial assets like cash, bonds, and stocks (Topic 4.1).

Verified for the 2027 AP Macroeconomics examLast updated June 2026

What is the Rate of Return?

The rate of return measures how much an asset pays you back, stated as a percentage of what you put in. Buy a $1,000 bond and earn $50 in interest over a year, and your rate of return is 5%. For stocks, the return comes from dividends and capital gains. For bonds, it comes from interest payments. For cash sitting in your wallet, it's basically zero.

The AP CED frames rate of return as one of three principal attributes of financial assets, alongside liquidity and risk (learning objective 4.1.A). These three pull against each other. Cash and demand deposits are super liquid but earn almost nothing. Stocks generally offer the highest rate of return but carry the most risk and can't always be sold quickly at a good price. Bonds sit in the middle as interest-bearing assets. The whole point of learning this term is being able to explain that tradeoff, not just calculate a percentage.

Why the Rate of Return matters in AP Macroeconomics

Rate of return lives in Topic 4.1 (Financial Assets) in Unit 4: The Financial Sector, directly supporting learning objective 4.1.A, which asks you to define liquidity, rate of return, and risk for different classes of financial assets including money. It's also the hidden engine behind two other big Unit 4 ideas. First, the opportunity cost of holding money (EK MEA-3.A.4) is literally the rate of return you give up by not holding bonds, and that's what makes money demand slope downward in the money market. Second, the inverse relationship between bond prices and interest rates (learning objective 4.1.B) is really a statement about returns. A bond's fixed payment delivers a higher rate of return when you buy the bond cheaper. If you understand rate of return, both of those ideas stop feeling like memorized rules.

How the Rate of Return connects across the course

Bond Prices and Interest Rates (Unit 4)

A bond pays a fixed dollar amount, so the cheaper you buy it, the higher your rate of return. That's the whole logic behind the inverse relationship in 4.1.B. When interest rates rise, old bonds with lower payouts must sell at a discount to offer a competitive return.

Money Market Equilibrium (Unit 4)

The opportunity cost of holding money is the rate of return you forfeit by not holding bonds instead. When interest rates rise, holding cash costs you more in forgone returns, so the quantity of money demanded falls. That's why the money demand curve slopes downward.

Capital Gains and Dividends (Unit 4)

These are the two ingredients of a stock's rate of return. Dividends are the periodic payouts, and capital gains are the profit from selling shares for more than you paid. Together they explain why stocks (equity) typically out-earn bonds and cash.

M1 and Demand Deposits (Unit 4)

The most liquid assets, cash and demand deposits, sit at the bottom of the rate-of-return ladder. This is the liquidity-return tradeoff in action. You hold M1 money for convenience, not for earnings.

Is the Rate of Return on the AP Macroeconomics exam?

This term shows up almost entirely in multiple-choice questions built around the liquidity-return-risk tradeoff. A classic stem asks which asset has the highest liquidity but the lowest rate of return (cash or demand deposits) or which asset class generally offers the highest rate of return (stocks). You should be able to rank cash, demand deposits, bonds, and stocks on all three attributes and explain why the rankings move in opposite directions. No released FRQ uses the phrase verbatim, but the concept underpins FRQ-tested ideas like the opportunity cost of holding money and the bond price-interest rate relationship, so a shaky grasp here costs you points elsewhere in Unit 4.

The Rate of Return vs Interest Rate

An interest rate is one specific kind of rate of return, the one paid on interest-bearing assets like bonds and savings accounts. Rate of return is the broader umbrella that also covers stock earnings from dividends and capital gains. On the exam, 'interest' signals bonds and the money market, while 'rate of return' signals comparing asset classes against each other.

Key things to remember about the Rate of Return

  • Rate of return is an asset's profit or loss expressed as a percentage of its initial cost.

  • It's one of three attributes of financial assets in Topic 4.1, along with liquidity and risk, and the three trade off against each other.

  • Cash and demand deposits are the most liquid assets but earn the lowest rate of return, while stocks generally earn the highest return with the most risk.

  • The opportunity cost of holding money is the rate of return you give up by not holding interest-bearing assets like bonds.

  • Bond prices and interest rates are inversely related because a bond's fixed payment delivers a higher rate of return when the bond is bought at a lower price.

Frequently asked questions about the Rate of Return

What is rate of return in AP Macro?

It's the profit or loss a financial asset generates, expressed as a percentage of its initial cost. In Topic 4.1, it's one of the three attributes (with liquidity and risk) you use to compare cash, demand deposits, bonds, and stocks.

Which financial asset has the highest rate of return?

Stocks (equity) generally offer the highest rate of return through dividends and capital gains, but they also carry the most risk. Cash sits at the opposite end with near-zero return but maximum liquidity.

Is rate of return the same as the interest rate?

Not exactly. The interest rate is the rate of return on interest-bearing assets like bonds, but rate of return is broader and also includes stock earnings from dividends and capital gains.

Does holding cash mean a zero cost since it earns nothing?

No. Holding cash has a real opportunity cost, which is the interest you could have earned holding bonds instead (EK MEA-3.A.4). That forgone rate of return is exactly why money demand falls when interest rates rise.

How is rate of return different from liquidity?

Liquidity measures how easily an asset converts to cash, while rate of return measures how much the asset earns. They usually move in opposite directions, so the most liquid assets (cash, demand deposits) earn the least, which is the core tradeoff MCQs test.