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Information Ratio

The information ratio (IR) is a performance measurement tool that compares the excess return of an investment or portfolio to its tracking error, which measures how closely the investment tracks its benchmark. The ratio is used to evaluate how efficiently a portfolio manager generates excess returns relative to the risk taken. A higher information ratio indicates better risk-adjusted returns, making it a popular metric for comparing active fund managers.

Example

A mutual fund has an annual excess return of 4% over its benchmark with a tracking error of 2%. Its information ratio would be 2, indicating good risk-adjusted performance.

Key points

Compares excess returns to tracking error.

Used to measure the efficiency of a portfolio in generating excess returns.

A higher ratio indicates better risk-adjusted performance.

Quick Answers to Curious Questions

The information ratio is calculated by dividing the excess return by the tracking error, providing a measure of risk-adjusted performance.

It helps assess how effectively a portfolio manager generates excess returns relative to the risk they take compared to the benchmark.

A high information ratio indicates that a portfolio manager is delivering strong risk-adjusted returns and efficiently outperforming the benchmark.
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