Metrics Explainer

Understand how each metric measures performance, risk, and consistency.

What Calmar Ratio measures

Calmar Ratio is one of the metrics we use to evaluate aPMS scheme. It helps quantify a specific dimension of performance, risk, consistency, or implementation quality.

**Best for:**Comparing ‘return per unit of worst loss’ for capital-preservation preferences.


Why it matters for PMS scheme evaluation

  • Adds context beyond headline returns by highlighting one key dimension of scheme behavior.
  • Improves comparability across schemes when used within the same strategy and benchmark context.
  • Becomes most useful when combined with other metrics (especially drawdowns and risk-adjusted measures).

How to interpret Calmar Ratio

Use the Calmar Calculator tool

Compare PMS schemes using this and other metrics

  • **Compare like-for-like:**use peer schemes with similar strategy and benchmark.
  • **Check multiple horizons:**avoid a single time window (for example 1Y vs 3Y vs 5Y).
  • **Use a cluster:**pair withMax DrawdownandVolatilityto understand trade-offs.

Common pitfalls

Read our methodologyfor calculation assumptions and limitations.

  • Can reward low drawdown achieved via high cash, which may reduce upside capture.
  • Short track records can make this metric unstable; prefer longer histories where possible.
  • Calculation choices can shift values—compare schemes using consistent assumptions.

Related metrics


FAQs

Calmar Ratio is a metric used to evaluate PMS scheme behavior. In simple terms, it helps quantify: return relative to max drawdown; growth vs worst loss trade-off.

Not always. Higher values can come with trade-offs. Interpret Calmar Ratio alongside drawdowns, volatility, and strategy context.

Compare within similar peer groups and across multiple horizons. Use Calmar Ratio as part of a metric cluster, not a single-number decision.

What is Calmar Ratio in a PMS scheme?

Calmar Ratio is a metric used to evaluate PMS scheme behavior. In simple terms, it helps quantify: return relative to max drawdown; growth vs worst loss trade-off.

Is a higher Calmar Ratio always better?

Not always. Higher values can come with trade-offs. Interpret Calmar Ratio alongside drawdowns, volatility, and strategy context.

How should I use Calmar Ratio to compare schemes?

Compare within similar peer groups and across multiple horizons. Use Calmar Ratio as part of a metric cluster, not a single-number decision.


Next:How to compare PMS schemes·How to evaluate a PMS scheme·All metrics