Information Ratio Calculator
Information Ratio Calculator
Measure the consistency of active management by comparing a portfolio's active return to its tracking error. The information ratio tells you how much excess return a manager generates per unit of active risk taken relative to a benchmark.
Inputs
Results
INSTRUCTIONS
How to Use This Calculator
1. Portfolio Return
Enter your portfolio's annualized return for the period you are evaluating, such as 1 year, 3 years, or 5 years.
2. Benchmark Return
Enter the annualized return of the benchmark index (such as the S&P 500) for the same measurement period.
3. Tracking Error
Enter the annualized tracking error, which is the standard deviation of the difference between portfolio and benchmark returns.
4. Evaluate the Manager
Review the information ratio. Values above 0.5 are generally considered good; above 1.0 is exceptional for an active manager.
EDUCATION
Understanding the Information Ratio
The information ratio (IR) measures the consistency and skill of active portfolio management by comparing the portfolio's active return (excess return over a benchmark) to the tracking error (the standard deviation of those active returns). The formula is: IR = (Rp - Rb) / Tracking Error, where Rp is the portfolio return and Rb is the benchmark return. A higher IR indicates more consistent outperformance per unit of active risk.
The information ratio is considered one of the most important metrics for evaluating actively managed funds. While a fund may occasionally beat its benchmark, the IR captures whether that outperformance is consistent or just due to taking large, risky bets. An IR of 0.5 is generally considered good, 0.75 is very good, and above 1.0 is exceptional. Most active managers struggle to maintain an IR above 0.5 over extended periods, which partly explains the growth of passive investing.
For example, a portfolio returning 11% against a benchmark returning 9% with a tracking error of 4% has an information ratio of 0.50. This means the manager earns 0.50 units of active return for each unit of tracking error. The IR helps investors distinguish between managers who outperform through skill versus those who outperform by simply taking on more risk or making concentrated bets that may not be repeatable.
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