Trailing 12-month yield (TTM yield) is the percentage of income investors received from an investment in the last 12 months.
Trailing 12-Month Yield
Also called: TTM yield
What is trailing 12-month yield?
TTM Yield is commonly used with funds and is calculated by taking the weighted average of the underlying holdings’ yields. For example, if a fund’s underlying holdings produce an income of $1,000 in the trailing 12 months, and an investor has $100,000 in the fund, the fund’s TTM yield is 1% (1,000/100,000).
TTM yield should be considered an estimate of yield, as it may not always represent income received by all investors. Backward-looking income estimates like TTM yield can’t accurately predict future income, so it may be better to use SEC yield for forward-looking decisions.