Jane Doe
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The Sharpe ratio is a financial metric that measures an investment's risk-adjusted return, indicating how much excess return an investment provides for the extra risk taken compared to a risk-free asset.
It is calculated as the investment's return minus the risk-free rate, divided by its standard deviation (volatility). A higher Sharpe ratio generally signifies a better investment, as it suggests greater returns for the amount of risk assumed
The Sharpe ratio shows whether a portfolio's excess returns are attributable to smart investment decisions or luck and risk.
Returns aren't the only way to measure the quality of an investment.
Risk in finance is commonly measured by the volatility of returns, denoted by σ (sigma). The standard deviation of returns quantifies how much returns deviate from their average value.
Formula:
σ=N1i=1∑N(Ri−Rˉ)2Where:
A higher σ indicates greater risk (volatility) in the investment's returns.
Formula:
S=σRˉ−RfWhere:
A common way to annualize the Sharpe Ratio when using daily returns is:
Sannual=daily volatilityaverage daily net×252Where:
This formula scales the daily Sharpe Ratio to an annual value, making it comparable across assets and timeframes.
Returns alone
Incorporates volatility to tell us how much return we earned per unit of risk.
| Investment | Sharpe Ratio |
|---|---|
| SPY | 0.45 |
| Warren Buffet | 0.75 |
| Citadel | 2.0+ |
What if we have to choose between returns vs Sharpe Ratio?
An underlying's Sharpe Ratio isn't a good, but it's returns are better.
How leverage works? Borrowing money to invest more than I own.
Magnifies returns & risks 2x leverage, 2x returns, 2x vol, same sharpe 3x leverage, 3x returns, 3x vol, same sharpe 4x leverage, 4x returns, 4x vol, same sharpe
Leverages amplifies both returns and volatility -> SR remains constant.
Use leverage with high Sharpe Strategies to target higher returns while maintaining the identical Sharpe.