Calmar Ratio
The Calmar ratio is a risk-adjusted measure equal to the compound annual growth rate divided by the absolute value of the maximum drawdown, expressing how much annual growth a strategy delivers per unit of its worst peak-to-trough loss.
Quick answer: The Calmar ratio is a risk-adjusted measure equal to the compound annual growth rate divided by the absolute value of the maximum drawdown, expressing how much annual growth a strategy delivers per unit of its worst peak-to-trough loss.
In simple words
The Calmar ratio judges a strategy by its growth relative to its single worst fall. If a strategy compounds at 20 percent a year but at some point lost 40 percent from a peak, its Calmar is 0.5. Because it uses the deepest drawdown as the risk measure, it speaks directly to the pain a trader must survive, which pure volatility metrics miss.
Purpose
The Calmar ratio exists to tie reward directly to the worst-case loss an investor would have had to endure, on the view that maximum drawdown, not volatility, is what actually forces people to abandon a strategy.
Professional explanation
Growth over worst pain
Calmar pairs a return metric, CAGR, with a risk metric, maximum drawdown, that captures the deepest sustained loss rather than average variability. This makes it intuitively aligned with survival: a strategy is only usable if you can withstand its worst historical drawdown, and Calmar tells you how much annual growth that endurance bought. A Calmar of 1 means the strategy's yearly growth equalled its worst drawdown; higher is better.
The window-sensitivity problem
Both inputs to Calmar depend on the observation window, and the maximum drawdown especially so. Maximum drawdown is an extreme-value statistic: it can only stay the same or get worse as you add data, and a single crisis defines it. A Calmar computed over a benign three-year window that happened to miss a crash will look far better than the same strategy measured across a period containing one. Calmar is therefore highly sensitive to whether the sample includes the strategy's bad regime, and short-window Calmars are easy to flatter.
The traditional 36-month convention
The metric was popularised for managed futures using a rolling 36-month window of monthly data, and some practitioners still standardise on three years so that Calmars are comparable across managers. There is nothing sacred about 36 months; it is a convention that balances having enough data to capture a real drawdown against staying responsive to recent performance. Whatever window is chosen, it must be stated, because a Calmar without its measurement period is not interpretable.
Why single-point risk is both a strength and a weakness
Using the single worst drawdown makes Calmar concrete and survival-relevant, but it also means the entire risk term rests on one historical episode. That one number carries enormous estimation uncertainty: the true worst-case is almost certainly deeper than any finite backtest revealed, so Calmar's denominator is optimistically small. This is why Monte Carlo resampling of the trade sequence, which generates a distribution of plausible maximum drawdowns, is a valuable companion to a raw Calmar.
Relationship to the MAR ratio and Sterling ratio
Calmar belongs to a family of drawdown-based ratios. The MAR ratio is essentially the same idea over a full track record, while the Sterling ratio uses an average of the largest drawdowns (sometimes with an added constant) rather than the single worst, making it a little less hostage to one extreme point. These variants trade Calmar's sharp focus on the worst case for a more stable, less outlier-driven denominator; none is universally superior, and the choice should match how the risk will actually bite.
Formula
Calmar = CAGR รท |Maximum drawdown|
CAGR = compound annual growth rate over the window, Maximum drawdown = the largest peak-to-trough decline over the same window, taken as an absolute (positive) value. Both are period-dependent; the maximum drawdown in particular can only worsen with more data, so the measurement window must always be stated. A Calmar of 1 means annual growth equals the worst drawdown.
Calmar vs Sharpe vs Sortino
| Aspect | Calmar | Sharpe | Sortino |
|---|---|---|---|
| Risk measure | Maximum drawdown | Total volatility | Downside deviation |
| Return measure | CAGR | Mean excess return | Mean excess return |
| Focus | Worst-case survival | Average risk-adjusted return | Downside-adjusted return |
| Main weakness | Rests on one drawdown episode | Penalises upside | Noisy downside sample |
| Window sensitivity | Very high | Moderate | Moderate |
Practical example
Illustrative example (Indian market)
A Nifty positional strategy compounds at a CAGR of 18 percent over its backtest, and its worst peak-to-trough fall during that period was 30 percent. Calmar = 0.18 รท 0.30 = 0.6, meaning it produced 0.6 units of annual growth per unit of worst drawdown. If a competing strategy also had an 18 percent CAGR but a 45 percent maximum drawdown, its Calmar would be 0.4, and Calmar would correctly rank the first as the better survival-adjusted performer despite identical growth.
A backtest of an NSE equity strategy run only over 2021 to 2023 might show a flattering Calmar because it dodged the March 2020 COVID crash; extending the same test back through early 2020 would deepen the maximum drawdown sharply and could halve the Calmar, illustrating how the metric depends on whether the window contains the strategy's stress event.
Advantages
- Ties reward directly to the worst loss an investor must survive
- Intuitive and survival-relevant, unlike pure volatility ratios
- Simple to compute from CAGR and maximum drawdown
- Penalises strategies whose growth came with a brutal drawdown
- Widely used in managed futures, aiding cross-manager comparison
Limitations
- Its blind spot: the entire risk term rests on one historical drawdown that understates the true worst case
- Extremely sensitive to the observation window and whether it contains a crisis
- Maximum drawdown can only worsen with more data, so short-window Calmars flatter
- Ignores the frequency and duration of drawdowns, seeing only the deepest
- Unstable and hard to compare across differing measurement periods
- Says nothing about volatility path or capacity
Why it matters in practice
- It is the go-to ratio when survivability, not smoothness, is the priority
- Its window sensitivity makes stating the measurement period non-negotiable
Common mistakes
- Quoting Calmar without stating the measurement window
- Comparing Calmars computed over different periods as if they were equivalent
- Trusting a high Calmar from a short window that missed the strategy's crash
- Treating the historical maximum drawdown as the true worst case
- Ignoring that many shallow drawdowns can matter even when the deepest is modest
- Optimising a strategy to maximise in-sample Calmar, which curve-fits to one lucky escape
Professional usage
Managed-futures and systematic allocators favour Calmar because drawdown, not volatility, is what triggers redemptions and abandonment, so a growth-per-worst-loss number maps onto real business risk. They fix and disclose the window, often three years, and they pair Calmar with a Monte Carlo distribution of maximum drawdowns to acknowledge that the historical worst case is an optimistic sample. They also cross-check with Sterling or average-drawdown variants so a single episode does not dominate the verdict.
Key takeaways
- Calmar is CAGR divided by the absolute maximum drawdown
- It measures annual growth per unit of the worst peak-to-trough loss
- It is extremely window-sensitive because maximum drawdown is an extreme statistic
- Always state the measurement period; short windows flatter Calmar
- The historical worst drawdown understates the true worst case, so pair it with Monte Carlo
Frequently asked questions
What is the Calmar ratio?
How is Calmar different from Sharpe?
What is a good Calmar ratio?
Why is Calmar so sensitive to the time window?
What window should I use for Calmar?
Does Calmar capture the true worst case?
What is the difference between Calmar and the MAR ratio?
What is the Sterling ratio and how does it differ?
Can I optimize a strategy to maximize Calmar?
Does Calmar consider how often drawdowns happen?
Can the Calmar ratio be negative?
How does Calmar treat a strategy with no drawdown?
Should Calmar replace Sharpe and Sortino?
Why did my Calmar drop when I extended the backtest?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Calmar Ratio.
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What is a good Calmar ratio?
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Should I use Calmar instead of Sharpe?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only โ not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.