System Trading Forum

 

'Evolving Traders!'

Home Education Forums Products Systems

 

     
 

Quick Links

Technical Analysis

Fundamental Analysis

Options

Articles

Newsletter

Free Stuff

Free code library

TradeStation EasyLanguage Course

 

 

What's New

Sharpe Ratio

A ratio developed by Nobel laureate William F. Sharpe to measure risk-adjusted performance. The Sharpe ratio is calculated by subtracting the risk-free rate - such as that of the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond - from the rate of return for a portfolio and dividing the result by the standard deviation of the portfolio returns.

 

The Sharpe ratio tells us whether a portfolio's returns are due to smart investment decisions or a result of excess risk. This measurement is very useful because although one portfolio or fund can reap higher returns than its peers, it is only a good investment if those higher returns do not come with too much additional risk. The greater a portfolio's Sharpe ratio, the better its risk-adjusted performance has been.

A variation of the Sharpe ratio is the Sortino ratio, which removes the effects of upward price movements on standard deviation to measure only return against downward price volatility.

 

Notes and references

  1. http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/sharperatio.asp

 

See also

Recent Posts


TIME TO BUY OIL STOCKS
How to select a right commodity broker
Learn about futures trading at LearnAboutFutures.com
Arbitrage - Riskless Income from Stock Market
A SECRET TIMING INDICATOR


 

Partner Site



 

Our Sponsors

 

 

Copyright Management Information Technologies, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

MIT Links Capturing Option Theta Futures and FX Broker