Enter Values
Loss Asymmetry
Gains compound on a smaller base after losses
Drawdown Results
Formula Breakdown
Model Assumptions
- User-supplied values: You enter Peak, Trough, and Current values from a drawdown episode
- Single episode: Peak and Trough must be from the same drawdown event
- "Maximum" is user-asserted: This is only the true maximum drawdown if you've identified the worst historical pair
- Current >= Trough: Trough is the lowest point of this episode
- Duration informational: Not used in calculations
- Educational purposes: Not financial advice
Understanding Maximum Drawdown
Video Explanation
Video: Maximum Drawdown Explained
What is Maximum Drawdown?
Maximum drawdown (MDD) measures the largest peak-to-trough decline in a portfolio's value before a new peak is established. Unlike volatility metrics that treat upside and downside equally, drawdown focuses exclusively on actual losses experienced.
Required Gain to Recover = Peak / Trough - 1
Note: Drawdown is always negative; required gain is always positive
The Asymmetry of Losses
One of the most important concepts in risk management is that losses and gains are not symmetric. A 50% loss requires a 100% gain to recover. A 90% loss requires a 900% gain.
-35% Drawdown
Portfolio drops from $1,000,000 to $650,000. You now have only 65% of your original capital.
+53.85% to Recover
To get from $650,000 back to $1,000,000, you need $350,000 gain, which is 53.85% of $650,000.
MDD vs VaR
Value at Risk (VaR) estimates potential future loss at a confidence level (e.g., "95% confident daily losses won't exceed $X"). It's forward-looking and probabilistic.
Maximum Drawdown measures actual historical loss from peak to trough. It's backward-looking and deterministic. VaR tells you what might happen; drawdown tells you what did happen.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. You supply Peak, Trough, and Current values manually - this tool does not compute drawdown from time-series data. The result is only the "maximum" drawdown if you've identified the worst historical peak-to-trough pair. This tool should not be used as the sole basis for investment decisions.
Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM
Portfolio Analytics & Risk Management
Master portfolio risk metrics including drawdown analysis, VaR, Sharpe ratio, and more. Build practical skills for hedge fund and asset management roles.
- Maximum drawdown and Calmar ratio deep dives
- VaR and Expected Shortfall calculations
- Sharpe, Sortino, and Information ratios
- Real-world portfolio analytics in Excel