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SCOR SE (XPAR:SCR) 3-Year Sortino Ratio : 0.61 (As of Jul. 23, 2025)


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What is SCOR SE 3-Year Sortino Ratio?

The 3-Year Sortino Ratio measures the additional return that an investor receives per unit of the downside risk over the past three years. As of today (2025-07-23), SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio is 0.61.


Competitive Comparison of SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio

For the Insurance - Reinsurance subindustry, SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio, along with its competitors' market caps and 3-Year Sortino Ratio data, can be viewed below:

* Competitive companies are chosen from companies within the same industry, with headquarter located in same country, with closest market capitalization; x-axis shows the market cap, and y-axis shows the term value; the bigger the dot, the larger the market cap. Note that "N/A" values will not show up in the chart.


SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio Distribution in the Insurance Industry

For the Insurance industry and Financial Services sector, SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio distribution charts can be found below:

* The bar in red indicates where SCOR SE's 3-Year Sortino Ratio falls into.


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SCOR SE 3-Year Sortino Ratio Calculation

The 3-Year Sortino Ratio measures the risk-adjusted return of an investment asset or portfolio in the last three year, focusing specifically on downside risk rather than total risk. A stock / portfolio's 3-Year Sortino Ratio can be calculated by dividing the difference between the three-year average monthly returns of the investment and the risk-free rate, by the standard deviation of the downside risks over the past three year.

A downside risk is a potential loss from the asset or investment. The Downside risk here is measured by the downside deviation, which is the standard deviation of negative returns.


SCOR SE  (XPAR:SCR) 3-Year Sortino Ratio Explanation

The 3-Year Sortino Ratio inidicates the risk-adjusted return of an investment over the past three year. It is calculated as the annualized result of the average three-year monthly excess returns divided by the standard deviation of negative returns in the three-year period. The monthly excess return is the monthly investment return minus the monthly risk-free rate (typically the 10-year Treasury Constant Maturity Rate). If the risk-free rate for a specific region is not available, U.S. data is used by default.

Differnt from the Sharpe Ratio that penalizes both upside and downside volatility equally, the Sortino Ratio penalizes only those returns falling below a user-specified target or required rate of return. The expected returns here is set to the risk-free rate as well.


SCOR SE 3-Year Sortino Ratio Related Terms

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SCOR SE Business Description

Address
5, avenue Kleber, Paris, FRA, 75116
Scor is the world's sixth-largest reinsurer, selling nonlife and life reinsurance. Scor Global Life insures life insurance and annuities. This means in its co-insurance agreements Scor shares in premiums and claims of life insurance contracts that have been sold by a primary insurer. In its excess of loss agreements, Scor reimburses a primary insurer for claims that are filed above an agreed amount. Scor also sells property and casualty reinsurance in coinsurance and excess of loss. Historically, Scor has been better in specialist lines and not as good in lines where there is a large potential for loss. Having recently grown in natural catastrophe, standards of underwriting there were not good. The business subsequently decided to move back to less volatile lines.

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