What is Nasdaq 100's risk, return, and volatility like?
Nasdaq 100 returned +46.6% over the 1Y window. On the 5Y lens, Sharpe ratio is 0.53, annualized volatility is 22.4%, and max drawdown is -35.1%.
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Price history
Nasdaq 100 price over the past 5Y
Track Nasdaq 100's standalone price path with macro and asset-specific events enabled by default.
Nasdaq 100 price over the past 5Y
Key takeaways
- Total Return: QQQ returned +46.6% over the 1Y window and +97.0% over the 5Y window ; annualized return over 5Y was +14.5%.
- Risk-adjusted return: Sharpe was 0.53 and Sortino was 0.76 over 5Y. Sharpe counts total volatility; Sortino focuses on downside volatility.
- Volatility & drawdown: Annualized volatility was 16.9% over 1Y and 22.4% over 5Y ; max drawdown was -12.1% over 1Y and -35.1% over 5Y .
- Tail risk (Expected Shortfall): Over 5Y, daily VaR (5%) was -2.3% and Expected Shortfall was -3.3%. VaR is the cutoff; Expected Shortfall is the average move inside the worst 5% of daily returns.
- Skew & kurtosis: Over 5Y, skew was 0.05 and excess kurtosis was 4.69. Skew shows return asymmetry; excess kurtosis shows how fat the tails were versus a Normal distribution.
- Risk ratios: Sortino Ratio: 0.76 , Calmar Ratio: 0.41 , Sterling Ratio: 0.49 , Treynor Ratio: 0.10 , Ulcer Index: 13.56% .
Nasdaq 100 Drawdown
Max drawdown shows the deepest peak-to-trough decline Nasdaq 100 suffered in each research window. 1Y: -12.1%; 5Y: -35.1%.
Nasdaq 100 is currently 0.0% below its prior peak, with the high-water mark at $648.85. 5Y low is $255.28.
5Y drawdown episodes
Nasdaq 100 Volatility
Volatility Nasdaq 100's annualized volatility shows how widely daily closes moved over 1Y and 5Y. Higher values mean a noisier path, not automatically a better or worse investment. 1Y: 16.9%; 5Y: 22.4%.
Benchmark context
Where QQQ fits relative to other lenses
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Risk-adjusted ratios
These ratios compare return against different definitions of risk: total volatility, downside volatility, drawdowns, benchmark beta, and time spent underwater.
Nasdaq 100 Sharpe Ratio
QQQ Sharpe Ratio (5Y)
Return per total volatilityThe dot sits at (Nasdaq 100's annualized volatility, its excess annualized return). The slope from the origin to the dot is the Sharpe ratio — steeper means the asset converted risk into return more efficiently.
Sharpe ratio Nasdaq 100's Sharpe ratio measures excess return per unit of total volatility. Higher readings mean the asset converted risk into return more efficiently over the same window. 1Y: 2.13; 5Y: 0.53.
A Sharpe above 1.0 is generally considered good, above 2.0 is excellent. Negative Sharpe means the asset underperformed the risk-free rate. Calculated on each asset's full 365-day lookback of available prices and annualized using the asset calendar (365 for crypto, 252 trading days for equities/ETFs/metals).
Nasdaq 100 Sortino Ratio
QQQ Sortino Ratio (5Y)
Return per downside volatilityNasdaq 100's daily-return distribution over the long window. Days left of the target line are the only ones Sortino penalizes in the denominator — so a distribution with a fat left tail produces a smaller Sortino even at the same mean return.
Sortino ratio Nasdaq 100's Sortino ratio isolates downside volatility instead of all volatility. It is the cleaner lens when you care more about bad downside moves than upside noise. 1Y: 3.27; 5Y: 0.76.
A higher Sortino is better. It's useful when upside volatility is common (crypto is the obvious example). Calculated on each asset's full 365-day lookback of available prices, using the daily risk-free rate as the target return, and annualized using the asset calendar (365 for crypto, 252 trading days for equities/ETFs/metals).
Nasdaq 100 Calmar Ratio
QQQ Calmar Ratio (5Y)
CAGR per worst drawdownNasdaq 100's CAGR bar sits above zero, the max drawdown bar sits below. Calmar is the ratio of those two magnitudes — a shallow drawdown bar with a tall CAGR bar produces a strong Calmar.
Calmar ratio Nasdaq 100's Calmar ratio measures return per unit of max drawdown. It is useful when the path of losses matters as much as the final return. 1Y: 3.86; 5Y: 0.41.
Calmar is computed on each asset's full 365-day lookback and uses the max drawdown over that same window.
Nasdaq 100 Sterling Ratio
QQQ Sterling Ratio (5Y)
Return per average drawdownThe underwater curve shows Nasdaq 100's drawdowns over the long window. Sterling averages every event deeper than the 10% threshold instead of taking only the worst one — so an asset with many mid-size drawdowns scores worse here than on Calmar.
Sterling ratio Nasdaq 100's Sterling ratio compares return against deep drawdown pressure. It gives a harsher read on assets that compound well but suffer ugly declines along the way. 1Y: 3.52; 5Y: 0.49.
Sterling uses average drawdown events deeper than 10% and subtracts the risk-free rate to report excess return.
Nasdaq 100 Ulcer Index
QQQ Ulcer Index (5Y)
Drawdown painThe underwater curve shows how deep and how long Nasdaq 100's drawdowns were. Ulcer is the root-mean-square of that curve — both depth and persistence count, so lower is better.
Ulcer Index Nasdaq 100's Ulcer Index measures both the depth and persistence of drawdowns. Lower is better because it means fewer and shallower underwater periods. 1Y: 3.14; 5Y: 13.56.
Ulcer Index is computed from each asset's drawdown series over the full lookback window.
Nasdaq 100 Treynor Ratio
QQQ Treynor Ratio (5Y)
Excess return per beta vs SPYThe line's slope is Nasdaq 100's beta to SPY — steeper means more market-sensitive. Treynor divides excess return by that slope, so an asset can look efficient with a shallow beta and a small return, or inefficient with a steep beta and a big return.
Treynor ratio measures excess return per unit of market beta versus SPY. A high Treynor means the asset compensated its market exposure well over this window. A low or negative Treynor means the asset's market risk wasn't rewarded.
Treynor uses beta vs the S&P 500 (SPY) on shared dates and the average 3-month Treasury rate as the risk-free rate.
Nasdaq 100 Tail Risk
Tail-risk stats use daily return distributions rather than simple end-point returns. They show how ugly the left tail has been, how severe the worst 5% of days were, and whether returns were skewed toward outsized upside or downside shocks.
The histogram shows the shape of Nasdaq 100's daily log returns over the 5Y window. Bars left of the 5% VaR marker are the worst 5% of days; the ES marker is the average loss inside that tail. Skew and excess kurtosis describe whether the distribution is symmetric around zero and whether extreme days are more common than a Normal distribution predicts.
QQQ daily return distribution (5Y)
QQQ daily return distribution (5Y)Log-return histogram with Value-at-Risk and Expected Shortfall markers at the 5% left tail.
| Metric | 1Y | 5Y |
|---|---|---|
| VaR (5%) | -1.9% Historical daily threshold | -2.3% Historical daily threshold |
| Expected shortfall (5%) | -2.2% Beyond the VaR threshold | -3.3% Beyond the VaR threshold |
| Skew | -0.07 | 0.05 |
| Excess kurtosis | 1.17 | 4.69 |
Less negative daily VaR and Expected Shortfall values mean the left tail was less violent. Skew and excess kurtosis help distinguish between steady compounding and a path dominated by occasional extreme moves.
Full stats table
Every window-consistent research metric
Each column keeps the same horizon across returns, ratios, drawdowns, and tail-risk metrics.
| Metric | 1Y Recent window | 5Y Deeper research window |
|---|---|---|
| Total return | +46.6% | +97.0% |
| Annualized return | +46.7% | +14.5% |
| Volatility | 16.9% Annualized daily closes | 22.4% Annualized daily closes |
| Sharpe ratio | 2.13 | 0.53 |
| Sortino ratio | 3.27 | 0.76 |
| Calmar ratio | 3.86 | 0.41 |
| Sterling ratio | 3.52 | 0.49 |
| Ulcer Index | 3.14 | 13.56 |
| Max drawdown | -12.1% 2025-10-29 to 2026-03-30 | -35.1% 2021-12-27 to 2022-11-03 |
| VaR (5%) | -1.9% Historical daily threshold | -2.3% Historical daily threshold |
| Expected shortfall (5%) | -2.2% Beyond the VaR threshold | -3.3% Beyond the VaR threshold |
| Skew | -0.07 | 0.05 |
| Excess kurtosis | 1.17 | 4.69 |
What viewers usually ask next
What is Nasdaq 100's 5Y CAGR?
Nasdaq 100's 5y cagr is +14.5% on Gale using the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 1-year volatility?
Annualized volatility is 16.9% over the past year.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Sharpe ratio?
Nasdaq 100's Sharpe ratio is 0.53 using the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Sortino ratio?
Nasdaq 100's Sortino ratio is 0.76 using the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Calmar ratio?
Nasdaq 100's Calmar ratio is 0.41 using the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Sterling ratio?
Nasdaq 100's Sterling ratio is 0.49 using the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Ulcer Index?
Nasdaq 100's Ulcer Index is 13.56 using the past 5 years. Lower is better because it means shallower and less persistent drawdowns.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year max drawdown?
Max drawdown is -35.1% over the past 5 years from 2021-12-27 to 2022-11-03.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year daily Value at Risk?
Using historical daily returns, Gale estimates a 5% Value at Risk of -2.33% over the past 5 years.
What is Nasdaq 100's 5-year Expected Shortfall?
Expected Shortfall is -3.26% over the past 5 years, which captures the average outcome inside the worst 5% of daily returns.
Is Nasdaq 100 still below its all-time high?
Current drawdown is +0.0% versus the all-time high of $648.85 reached on 2026-04-17.
Which benchmark should viewers open first for Nasdaq 100?
S&P 500 is the default benchmark lens on Gale because it gives the cleanest context for Nasdaq 100's recent behavior.