Sortino Ratio Calculator
Measure risk-adjusted return using only downside deviation, so upside volatility is not penalised.
Quick answer: The Sortino ratio is a variant of the Sharpe ratio that divides excess return by downside deviation instead of total standard deviation. Because it ignores upside swings, it rewards strategies whose volatility is mostly to the good side. This tool subtracts the per-period risk-free rate from the mean, divides by the downside deviation, and annualises by the square root of periods per year.
How to use it
Enter the mean periodic return, the downside deviation (the standard deviation of only the returns that fell below the target, usually zero or the risk-free rate), the annual risk-free rate and periods per year. The output is the annualised Sortino ratio. As with Sharpe, the annual risk-free rate is divided by periods per year to match the return period.
Formula
Sortino = ( ( Mean β Risk-free Γ· Periods ) Γ· Downside deviation ) Γ βPeriods
Downside deviation uses only returns below the target (typically zero), so favourable volatility does not inflate the denominator.
Frequently asked questions
How does Sortino differ from Sharpe?
What is downside deviation?
When is Sortino more informative than Sharpe?
Why can Sortino be misleadingly high?
What target should downside be measured against?
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