Return Over Maximum Drawdown (RoMaD)

Return Over Maximum Drawdown (RoMaD)

Return over maximum drawdown (RoMaD) is a risk-adjusted return metric used as an alternative to the Sharpe Ratio or Sortino Ratio. Return over maximum drawdown is the average return in a given period for a portfolio, expressed as a proportion of the maximum drawdown level. Return over maximum drawdown is a nuanced way of looking at a hedge-fund performance or portfolio performance in general. Return over maximum drawdown (RoMaD) is a risk-adjusted return metric used as an alternative to the Sharpe Ratio or Sortino Ratio. For example, if the maximum achieved value for a portfolio to date was $1,000 and the subsequent minimum level was $800, the maximum drawdown is 20% \[($1000 – $800) ÷ $1000\].

What Is Return Over Maximum Drawdown (RoMaD)?

Return over maximum drawdown (RoMaD) is a risk-adjusted return metric used as an alternative to the Sharpe Ratio or Sortino Ratio. Return over maximum drawdown is used mainly when analyzing hedge funds. It can be expressed as:

Understanding RoMaD

Return over maximum drawdown is a nuanced way of looking at a hedge-fund performance or portfolio performance in general. Drawdown is the difference between a portfolio's point of maximum return (the "high-water" mark) and any subsequent low point of performance. Maximum drawdown, also called Max DD or MDD, is the largest difference between a high point and a low point.

Maximum drawdown is becoming the preferred way of expressing the risk of a hedge-fund portfolio for investors who believe that observed loss patterns over longer periods of time are the best proxy for actual exposure. This is because these same investors believe hedge-fund performance does not follow a normal distribution of returns.

Examples of RoMaD

Return over maximum drawdown is the average return in a given period for a portfolio, expressed as a proportion of the maximum drawdown level. It enables investors to ask the question, "Am I willing to accept an occasional drawdown of X% in order to generate an average return of Y%?"

For example, if the maximum achieved value for a portfolio to date was $1,000 and the subsequent minimum level was $800, the maximum drawdown is 20% [($1000 – $800) ÷ $1000]. That is a scary number for investors, particularly if they were to bail out at the bottom with their investment 20% lighter.

Of course, that is only half the story. Imagine the same portfolio had an annual return of 10%. In that case, you have an investment with a maximum drawdown of 20% and a return of 10% for a RoMAD of 0.5. Now an investor can use that benchmark to compare performance with other portfolios. A RoMaD of 0.5 would be considered the more attractive investment over one with a maximum drawdown of 40% and a return of 10% (RoMaD = 0.25).

On the surface, the returns of these two portfolios are the same, but one is much riskier.

RoMaD in Context

In practice, investors want to see maximum drawdowns that are half the annual portfolio return or less. That means if the maximum drawdown is 10% over a given period, investors want a return of 20% (RoMaD = 2). So the larger a fund's drawdowns, the higher the expectation for returns.

As with any metric of evaluation, the performance expectations are tempered by the performance of other investments during the same period. So there are times of challenging market conditions where a RoMaD of 0.25 is actually stellar, all things considered.

Related terms:

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

Hedge Fund

A hedge fund is an actively managed investment pool whose managers may use risky or esoteric investment choices in search of outsized returns. read more

Hulbert Rating

A Hulbert rating is a risk-adjusted rating assigned to an investment newsletter that provides an impartial evaluation of a newsletter's performance. read more

Inefficient Portfolio

An inefficient portfolio is one that delivers an expected return that is too low for the amount of risk taken on.  read more

Managed Forex Accounts

A managed forex account is a type of forex account in which a money manager trades the account on a client's behalf for a fee. read more

Maximum Drawdown (MDD)

A maximum drawdown (MDD) is the maximum loss from a peak to a trough of a portfolio, before a new peak is attained.  read more

Portfolio Return

The portfolio return is the gain or loss achieved by a portfolio. It can be calculated on a daily or long-term basis. read more

Risk-Adjusted Return

A risk-adjusted return accounts for the riskiness of an investment compared to the risk-free rate of return. read more

Sharpe Ratio

The Sharpe ratio is used to help investors understand the return of an investment compared to its risk. read more

Sortino Ratio

The Sortino ratio improves upon the Sharpe ratio by isolating downside volatility from total volatility by dividing excess return by the downside deviation. read more