Sortino Ratio
Like the Sharpe ratio but penalises only downside volatility — better for asymmetric return distributions.
What is Sortino Ratio?
The Sortino ratio improves on the Sharpe ratio by penalising only the downside standard deviation (returns that fall below the minimum acceptable return, typically the risk-free rate), rather than total standard deviation. This distinction matters for investments with positively skewed returns: a fund that achieves many small gains and rare large losses should not be penalised for the upside variability. The denominator — downside deviation — is computed as the standard deviation of returns below the target rate only, treating all returns above the target as zero deviations. A higher Sortino ratio indicates better risk-adjusted performance on a downside-only basis. It is most useful for hedge funds and strategies where return distributions are not symmetric.
Formula
Worked Example
Annual, 3-Year Period
Source: CFA Institute — Portfolio Management, 7th ed. (2023-01-01)
Calculate Sortino Ratio
Annualised portfolio return
Often the risk-free rate; the threshold below which losses are measured
Standard deviation of returns that fall below the minimum acceptable return
Sortino Ratio
—
How to Interpret Sortino Ratio
📚 Portfolio Performance — Complete the path
- Sharpe Ratio
- Sortino Ratio
- Treynor Ratio
- Jensen's Alpha
- Information Ratio