Calculate the Sortino ratio for crypto investments to measure risk-adjusted returns using only downside volatility. Better than Sharpe for asymmetric returns.
The Sortino ratio improves upon the Sharpe ratio by distinguishing between harmful downside volatility and beneficial upside volatility. While the Sharpe ratio penalizes all volatility equally, investors generally welcome upside surprises. The Sortino ratio only penalizes returns that fall below a minimum acceptable return (MAR), typically the risk-free rate.
In crypto, where returns are highly skewed (large upside moves happen alongside large drawdowns), the Sortino ratio provides a more accurate risk-adjusted performance measure. A strategy that produces occasional large gains with controlled drawdowns will have a much higher Sortino ratio than Sharpe ratio.
This calculator computes the Sortino ratio using your portfolio return, the minimum acceptable return, and the downside deviation of your returns. A higher Sortino ratio indicates better performance relative to the downside risk taken.
Crypto traders, long-term holders, and DeFi participants benefit from transparent crypto sortino ratio calculations when planning entries, exits, or portfolio rebalances. Revisit this calculator whenever market conditions shift to keep your strategy grounded in accurate data.
Crypto returns are not symmetric — they tend to have positive skew (potential for large upside) and negative kurtosis (fat-tailed drawdowns). The Sortino ratio captures this asymmetry better than the Sharpe ratio, giving you a more meaningful measure of risk-adjusted performance that aligns with how investors actually experience risk. Real-time recalculation lets you model different market scenarios quickly, so you can act with confidence rather than relying on rough mental estimates.
Sortino Ratio = (Rp − MAR) / σ_downside Where: Rp = Portfolio annualized return MAR = Minimum acceptable return (often risk-free rate) σ_downside = Downside deviation (std dev of returns below MAR)
Result: Sortino Ratio: 1.14
With 45% return, 5% target, and 35% downside deviation: Sortino = (45% − 5%) / 35% = 1.14. If the total volatility were 60%, the Sharpe would be 0.67. The Sortino is higher because the total volatility includes upside variance that the Sortino correctly ignores. This indicates the strategy has favorable asymmetry.
Total volatility treats a 10% gain and a 10% loss as equally risky. But investors don't experience them the same way — losses create anxiety while gains create elation. Downside deviation captures only the "bad" volatility. A strategy with high total volatility but low downside deviation is experiencing mostly upside surprises, which the Sortino ratio correctly identifies as favorable.
When building a crypto portfolio, optimizing for Sortino ratio instead of Sharpe ratio leads to different asset allocations. Sortino-optimal portfolios tend to favor assets with controlled drawdowns even if they have high total volatility from upside moves. This often leads to portfolios with better real-world risk characteristics.
Compare strategy Sortino ratios over the same time period. If Strategy A has a Sortino of 1.5 and Strategy B has 0.8, Strategy A delivers nearly twice as much excess return per unit of downside risk. This comparison is more meaningful than raw return comparison because it accounts for the risk required to generate those returns.
The Sharpe ratio uses total volatility (both upside and downside) in the denominator, while the Sortino ratio uses only downside deviation. This means the Sortino ratio doesn't penalize positive surprises. For assets with positive skew, the Sortino is typically higher than the Sharpe.
Collect all returns below your target rate (MAR). Square the differences (return − MAR) for these negative-excess returns only. Average those squared differences, then take the square root. This gives you the standard deviation of only the negative deviations from your target.
Common choices are the risk-free rate (Treasury yield), inflation rate, or 0%. Some investors use their required return for retirement goals. The choice affects the result — a higher MAR gives a lower Sortino ratio because more returns fall below the threshold.
The Sortino ratio is preferred when returns have significant positive skew — which crypto often exhibits. Strategies with occasional large gains but controlled drawdowns (like trend-following) look much better on Sortino than Sharpe. Use Sortino when you care more about downside risk than overall variability.
Yes, when the portfolio return is below the minimum acceptable return. This means the strategy failed to achieve even the basic return target while experiencing downside volatility — a double failure that warrants reconsideration of the strategy.
A Sortino ratio above 1.0 indicates good downside risk management. Above 2.0 is excellent. Above 3.0 is exceptional and difficult to sustain. Most crypto buy-and-hold strategies have Sortino ratios between 0.5 and 1.5, depending on the market cycle.