I agree.
Strictly OP, and many others, are abusing the language when they talk like that.
People posting here do not always use strict definitions when they write, but it is sometimes possible to figure out what they are trying to say.
note: OPs figures - 14.97 to 60.39 ... call it 15 to 60, in 6 years is a percentage increase over that time of (60-15)(100)/15 = 300%, not 400%.
This is a clue that OP may not be adhering to the strict meanings of the words.
Technically, it was confirmation ... the way OP was using the figures in post #1 was already suggestive of this.
(Had he followed my suggestions in post #2, I'd have had the confirmation earlier.)
The calculation would more usually go like:
http://www.wikihow.com/Calculate-an-Annual-Percentage-Growth-Rate
... see "method 2".
100(f/s)^(1/y) = (100)(60/15)^(1/6) = 26%
... and this is typical.
However, strictly this should be "compound annual growth rate".
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/aagr.asp
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/cagr.asp
But you could be right...
@gamow99, you want to clear this up for us?