Glossary

From A to Z all the terms you need to skip the jargon and get started!

Sortino ratio

The Sortino ratio is a financial metric used to measure the risk-adjusted performance of an investment or portfolio. ๐Ÿ“ˆ

It is similar to the Sharpe ratio but focuses specifically on downside risk, which is the risk of negative returns. The Sortino ratio compares an investment's excess return (return above a risk-free rate) to its downside deviation, which only considers the volatility of negative returns.

Example: If two investment portfolios have similar returns, the one with a higher Sortino ratio has a better risk-adjusted performance, as it has experienced fewer and/or less severe negative returns.

Fun fact: The Sortino ratio is named after its creator, Frank A. Sortino, who introduced the concept in the 1980s as a better way to account for downside risk in investment analysis. ๐Ÿงช