Equity VaR Calculator

Quantify potential equity losses with flexible VaR methods. Compare confidence levels, horizons, and return histories. Export results, document assumptions, and improve risk decisions today.

Inputs
Choose a method, set confidence and horizon, then calculate VaR and Expected Shortfall.
Responsive form: 3 / 2 / 1 columns
Parametric uses volatility; Historical uses your returns.
Total equity portfolio market value.
Used for display only.
One-tailed confidence for losses.
Common: 1, 5, 10 days.
Typical equities default: 252.
Annualized standard deviation of returns.
Optional drift; set 0 if unsure.
Reset
Tip: For a single equity, portfolio value can be shares × price. For a multi-asset equity portfolio, use total market value and an appropriate portfolio volatility.
Example Data Table
Sample daily equity returns (percent). Historical VaR uses rolling compounded windows based on your holding period.
Day Return (%) Loss (%)
1 0.40 0.00
2 -0.20 0.20
3 0.15 0.00
4 -0.50 0.50
5 0.30 0.00
6 0.10 0.00
7 -0.15 0.15
8 0.05 0.00
9 -0.35 0.35
10 0.20 0.00
If portfolio value is USD 100,000 and 1‑day 95% VaR is 2.1%, the VaR amount is about USD 2,100.
Formula Used
Parametric (Normal) VaR
Convert annual inputs to the holding period using trading days per year:
  • σh = σann × √(h / T)
  • μh = μann × (h / T)
  • VaR% = max(0, z × σh − μh)
  • VaR = Portfolio Value × VaR%
z is the one‑tailed standard Normal quantile at confidence CL.
Expected Shortfall (Normal)
  • ES% = max(0, σh × φ(z) / (1 − CL) − μh)
  • ES = Portfolio Value × ES%
φ(z) is the standard Normal probability density at z.
Historical (Empirical) VaR
Use your daily return series, compute rolling compounded holding‑period returns, convert to losses, and take the CL percentile for VaR. ES is the mean of losses beyond VaR.
How to Use This Calculator
  1. Select a method: Parametric for volatility-based estimates, or Historical for return-series estimates.
  2. Enter portfolio value, confidence level, and holding period in days.
  3. For Parametric, provide annual volatility and optional mean return.
  4. For Historical, paste daily returns as percentages, one per line.
  5. Click Calculate VaR. Results appear above the form.
  6. Use Download CSV or PDF to archive inputs and outcomes.

Value at Risk in Equity Portfolios

Equity Value at Risk (VaR) summarizes potential downside over a chosen horizon at a chosen confidence. If a USD 100,000 portfolio has a 1‑day 95% VaR of 2.10%, the implied loss threshold is USD 2,100. VaR supports limit setting, capital planning, and communication, but it is a probabilistic estimate, not a worst‑case bound.

Many firms quote both percentage and currency VaR to match reporting needs. When positions are leveraged, compute VaR on total exposure, not cash invested. For multi‑stock portfolios, volatility should reflect diversification, so use portfolio variance from weights, volatilities, and correlations when available.

Choosing Confidence and Horizon

Confidence controls tail strictness: 90% is looser, 99% is stricter. Horizon scales risk through time; under common assumptions, volatility grows with the square root of days. For example, moving from 1 to 10 days increases the scale by √10 ≈ 3.16, so a 1‑day 2% VaR could map to about 6.3% before drift adjustments.

Parametric Inputs and Assumptions

The parametric method assumes returns are approximately Normal. You provide annual volatility and optional annual mean, then convert to the holding period using trading days. The calculator uses z‑scores for the selected confidence, producing VaR% = max(0, z·σh − μh). This approach is fast and stable, but it can understate extreme moves when returns are skewed or fat‑tailed.

Historical Returns and Data Quality

Historical VaR uses your observed daily returns, compounds them into rolling holding‑period returns, and takes the empirical loss percentile. Results depend heavily on sample length and regime relevance. Short datasets can miss crises; very long datasets may mix structural changes. Clean inputs by removing obvious data errors, aligning calendars, and using total‑return series where dividends matter.

Using VaR with Expected Shortfall

Expected Shortfall (ES) complements VaR by averaging losses beyond the VaR threshold. Two portfolios can share the same VaR yet have very different tail severity; ES reveals that difference. In reporting, present VaR and ES together, document method and lookback, and backtest exceedances. Use stress tests and scenario analysis alongside VaR for robust equity risk governance. Regulators and internal audit often require documented assumptions, data sources, and model validation schedules for transparency.


FAQs

1) Is this VaR one-tailed or two-tailed?

This calculator uses one-tailed VaR focused on downside losses. The confidence level represents the probability that losses stay below the VaR threshold over the holding period.

2) Should I enter volatility for a single stock or the whole portfolio?

Use portfolio volatility when you have multiple equities. Portfolio volatility accounts for weights and correlations, often producing lower risk than a simple average of individual volatilities.

3) How many return observations are enough for historical VaR?

More is usually better. Aim for at least several months of daily data, and preferably one to three years, while ensuring the period is relevant to current market conditions.

4) Why can VaR be lower than zero with drift?

A positive mean return can offset short-horizon risk in the formula. This tool floors VaR and ES at zero to keep results interpretable as non-negative loss thresholds.

5) What does Expected Shortfall add beyond VaR?

VaR gives a cutoff loss level, but it ignores how bad losses can get beyond that cutoff. Expected Shortfall estimates the average loss in the tail, improving tail-risk visibility.

6) Can I compare 1-day and 10-day VaR directly?

Yes, but interpret carefully. Parametric scaling often follows √time, while historical results reflect actual compounded paths. Keep the same method, confidence, and data regime for a fair comparison.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.