经济学人常用术语 | Risk-adjusted return

Risk-adjusted return

A calculation that reflects the greater risks of some portfolios compared with others. A fund manager might achieve a 20% return over a year, compared with a market return of just 10%. But if the manager owned just a few stocks, that portfolio was a lot riskier than the market as a whole. There is no guarantee that the manager’s luck will hold in subsequent years.