Information Ratio
Measures how consistently a fund generates active return above its benchmark per unit of active risk (tracking error).
What is Information Ratio?
The Information Ratio (IR) is the ratio of active return (portfolio return minus benchmark return) to tracking error (the standard deviation of active returns). It answers the question: how much alpha does a manager generate per unit of active risk taken? An IR above 0.50 is generally considered good; above 1.0 is excellent and difficult to sustain. Unlike the Sharpe ratio, which evaluates a portfolio in isolation, the IR explicitly measures skill relative to a benchmark. A manager who consistently beats the benchmark by a small, stable margin can achieve a higher IR than one who occasionally posts a large outperformance but with erratic active risk. It is the most widely used metric for evaluating active manager skill in institutional portfolio management.
Formula
Worked Example
5-Year Rolling Period 2019–2023
Source: CFA Institute — Portfolio Management, 7th ed. (2024-01-01)
Calculate Information Ratio
Annualised portfolio return
Annualised benchmark (e.g. S&P 500) return
Standard deviation of (portfolio return − benchmark return) over the period
Information Ratio
—
How to Interpret Information Ratio
📚 Portfolio Performance — Complete the path
- Sharpe Ratio
- Sortino Ratio
- Treynor Ratio
- Jensen's Alpha
- Information Ratio