The Sharpe ratio measures how much excess return you earn per unit of risk taken, making it essential for comparing investments on a risk-adjusted basis. An investment that returns 15% is only good if you understand the volatility required to achieve it. The Sharpe ratio tells you which investments give better returns relative to their risk.
The Formula
Sharpe Ratio = (Return - Risk-Free Rate) / Standard Deviation of Returns
Or:
Sharpe Ratio = (Rp - Rf) / ฯp
Where:
- Rp = portfolio return (or asset return)
- Rf = risk-free rate (usually government bond yield)
- ฯp = standard deviation of portfolio returns (volatility)
A higher Sharpe ratio means better risk-adjusted returns. The risk-free rate is subtracted because that return requires zero risk, so we measure excess return above that baseline.
Worked Example
Investment A: returns 12% with volatility (standard deviation) of 8% Investment B: returns 10% with volatility of 4% Risk-free rate: 2%
Sharpe A = (12% - 2%) / 8% = 10% / 8% = 1.25
Sharpe B = (10% - 2%) / 4% = 8% / 4% = 2.0
Investment B has a higher Sharpe ratio despite lower absolute return, meaning it delivers better return per unit of risk. If you had to choose, B is more efficient.
Time Horizon Matters
Sharpe ratios are typically calculated for 1-year periods, but you can annualize shorter periods by multiplying by โ(periods per year):
Annualized Sharpe = (Monthly Sharpe) ร โ12
Compare Sharpe ratios only if they're calculated over the same period.
Interpreting Sharpe Ratios
| Sharpe Ratio | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| < 1 | Below average risk-adjusted return |
| 1 โ 2 | Good risk-adjusted return |
| 2 โ 3 | Very good |
| > 3 | Exceptional |
Remember these are benchmarks; context matters. A Sharpe ratio of 0.5 might be acceptable for a stable bond fund but disappointing for a growth equity fund.
Limitations
The Sharpe ratio assumes normal distribution of returns (which real markets violate), ignores skewness and fat tails, and uses standard deviation as the risk measure (though other measures like Value at Risk exist). Also, it's backward-looking โ historical Sharpe ratios don't guarantee future performance.
Tips
Use Sharpe ratios to compare investments with similar categories and time horizons. It's also useful for comparing a fund manager's skill โ consistent outperformance with stable volatility reflects genuine alpha, not luck.
Use our Sharpe Ratio Calculator to compare the risk-adjusted returns of your investments instantly.