
Maximum Drawdown (MDD)
A maximum drawdown (MDD) is the maximum observed loss from a peak to a trough of a portfolio, before a new peak is attained. M D D \= Trough Value − Peak Value Peak Value \\begin{aligned} MDD=\\frac{\\textit{Trough Value}-\\textit{Peak Value}}{\\textit{Peak Value}}\\end{aligned} MDD\=Peak ValueTrough Value−Peak Value Maximum drawdown is a specific measure of drawdown that looks for the greatest movement from a high point to a low point, before a new peak is achieved. A maximum drawdown (MDD) is the maximum observed loss from a peak to a trough of a portfolio, before a new peak is attained. The maximum drawdown in this case is \\begin{aligned}&\\text{The maximum drawdown in this case is}\\\\&\\qquad\\quad=\\frac{\\$350,000-750,000}{\\$750,000=-53.33\\%}\\end{aligned} Maximum drawdown (MDD) is a measure of an asset's largest price drop from a peak to a trough.

What Is a Maximum Drawdown (MDD)?
A maximum drawdown (MDD) is the maximum observed loss from a peak to a trough of a portfolio, before a new peak is attained. Maximum drawdown is an indicator of downside risk over a specified time period.
It can be used both as a stand-alone measure or as an input into other metrics such as "Return over Maximum Drawdown" and the Calmar Ratio. Maximum Drawdown is expressed in percentage terms.



The Formula for Maximum Drawdown Is
M D D = Trough Value − Peak Value Peak Value \begin{aligned} MDD=\frac{\textit{Trough Value}-\textit{Peak Value}}{\textit{Peak Value}}\end{aligned} MDD=Peak ValueTrough Value−Peak Value
Understanding Maximum Drawdown
Maximum drawdown is a specific measure of drawdown that looks for the greatest movement from a high point to a low point, before a new peak is achieved. However, it's important to note that it only measures the size of the largest loss, without taking into consideration the frequency of large losses. Because it measures only the largest drawdown, MDD does not indicate how long it took an investor to recover from the loss, or if the investment even recovered at all.
Maximum drawdown (MDD) is an indicator used to assess the relative riskiness of one stock screening strategy versus another, as it focuses on capital preservation, which is a key concern for most investors. For example, two screening strategies can have the same average outperformance, tracking error, and volatility, but their maximum drawdowns compared to the benchmark can be very different.
A low maximum drawdown is preferred as this indicates that losses from investment were small. If an investment never lost a penny, the maximum drawdown would be zero. The worst possible maximum drawdown would be -100%, meaning the investment is completely worthless.
MDD should be used in the right perspective to derive the maximum benefit from it. In this regard, particular attention should be paid to the time period being considered. For instance, a hypothetical long-only U.S. fund Gamma has been in existence since 2000 and had a maximum drawdown of -30% in the period ending 2010. While this may seem like a huge loss, note that the S&P 500 had plunged more than 55% from its peak in October 2007 to its trough in March 2009. While other metrics would need to be considered to assess Gamma fund's overall performance, from the viewpoint of MDD, it has outperformed its benchmark by a huge margin.
Example of Maximum Drawdown
Consider an example to understand the concept of maximum drawdown. Assume an investment portfolio has an initial value of $500,000. The portfolio increases to $750,000 over a period of time, before plunging to $400,000 in a ferocious bear market. It then rebounds to $600,000, before dropping again to $350,000. Subsequently, it more than doubles to $800,000. What is the maximum drawdown?
The maximum drawdown in this case is \begin{aligned}&\text{The maximum drawdown in this case is}\\&\qquad\quad=\frac{\$350,000-750,000}{\$750,000=-53.33\%}\end{aligned} The maximum drawdown in this case is
Note the following points:
Related terms:
Calmar Ratio
The Calmar ratio compares the average annual compounded rate of return and the maximum drawdown risk of commodity trading advisors and hedge funds. read more
Detrended Price Oscillator (DPO) and Uses
A detrended price oscillator is an oscillator that strips out price trends in an effort to estimate the length of price cycles from peak to peak or trough to trough. The indicator may aid in trade timing. read more
Drawdown
A drawdown is a peak-to-trough decline during a specific period for an investment, fund, or trading account. Drawdowns help assess risk, compare investments, and are used to monitor trading performance. read more
Excess Returns
Excess returns are returns achieved above and beyond the return of a proxy. Excess returns will depend on a designated investment return comparison for analysis. read more
What Is Preservation of Capital?
Preservation of capital is a conservative investment strategy where the primary goal is to preserve capital and prevent loss in a portfolio. read more
Return Over Maximum Drawdown (RoMaD)
Return over maximum drawdown (RoMaD) is a risk-adjusted return metric used mainly when analyzing hedge funds. read more
Stock Screener
A stock screener is a tool that investors and traders can use to filter stocks based on user-defined metrics. They allow users to select trading instruments that fit a particular profile or set of criteria. read more
Up-Market Capture Ratio
The up-market capture ratio is used to evaluate how well an investment manager performed relative to an index during periods when that index rose. read more