- Treynor ratio
The Treynor ratio is a measurement of the returns earned in excess of that which could have been earned on a riskless
investment (i.e.Treasury Bill ) (per each unit of market risk assumed).The Treynor ratio (sometimes called reward-to-volatility ratio) relates excess return over the risk-free rate to the additional risk taken; however systematic risk instead of total risk is used. The higher the Treynor ratio, the better the performance under analysis.
:
where
: Treynor ratio,
: portfolio return,
:
risk free rate : portfolio beta
Like the
Sharpe ratio , the Treynor ratio ("T") does not quantify the value added, if any, of active portfolio management. It is a ranking criterion only. A ranking of portfolios based on the Treynor Ratio is only useful if the portfolios under consideration are sub-portfolios of a broader, fully diversified portfolio. If this is not the case, portfolios with identicalsystematic risk , but different total risk, will be rated the same. But the portfolio with a higher total risk is less diversified and therefore has a higher unsystematic risk which is not priced in the market.An alternative method of ranking portfolio management is
Jensen's alpha , which quantifies the added return as the excess return above thesecurity market line in thecapital asset pricing model .ee also
*
Jensen's alpha
*Modern portfolio theory
*Sharpe ratio
*Sortino ratio
*Upside potential ratio
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