Sortino Ratio
The Sortino ratio is a variation of the Sharpe ratio that differentiates between harmful volatility (downside risk) and overall volatility by only focusing on the downside risk of an investment. It measures the risk-adjusted return of an investment, considering only negative price fluctuations, which are the main concern for investors. A higher Sortino ratio indicates better risk-adjusted performance, as it shows the return achieved relative to only the downside risk.
Example
An investment fund has an average return of 10% and a downside deviation of 5%. Its Sortino ratio is 2, meaning it generates two units of return for every unit of downside risk.
Key points
• Measures risk-adjusted return, focusing only on downside risk.
• A variation of the Sharpe ratio, providing a more precise risk assessment.
• Higher ratios indicate better performance relative to negative volatility.