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In finance, the beta (β or market beta or beta coefficient) is a measure of how an individual asset moves (on average) when the overall stock market increases or decreases. Thus, beta is a useful measure of the contribution of an individual asset to the risk of the market portfolio when it is added in small quantity. Thus, beta is referred to as an asset's non-diversifiable risk, its
systematic risk In finance and economics, systematic risk (in economics often called aggregate risk or undiversifiable risk) is vulnerability to events which affect aggregate outcomes such as broad market returns, total economy-wide resource holdings, or aggre ...
, market risk, or
hedge A hedge or hedgerow is a line of closely spaced shrubs and sometimes trees, planted and trained to form a barrier or to mark the boundary of an area, such as between neighbouring properties. Hedges that are used to separate a road from adjoi ...
ratio. Beta is ''not'' a measure of idiosyncratic risk.


Interpretation of values

By definition, the value-weighted average of all market-betas of all investable
asset In financial accounting, an asset is any resource owned or controlled by a business or an economic entity. It is anything (tangible or intangible) that can be used to produce positive economic value. Assets represent value of ownership that can b ...
s with respect to the value-weighted market index is 1. If an asset has a beta above (below) 1, it indicates that its return moves more (less) than 1-to-1 with the return of the market-portfolio, on average. In practice, few stocks have negative betas (tending to go up when the market goes down). Most stocks have betas between 0 and 3.
Treasury bill United States Treasury securities, also called Treasuries or Treasurys, are government debt instruments issued by the United States Department of the Treasury to finance government spending as an alternative to taxation. Since 2012, U.S. gov ...
s (like most fixed income instruments) and
commodities In economics, a commodity is an economic good, usually a resource, that has full or substantial fungibility: that is, the market treats instances of the good as equivalent or nearly so with no regard to who produced them. The price of a co ...
tend to have low or zero betas,
call option In finance, a call option, often simply labeled a "call", is a contract between the buyer and the seller of the call option to exchange a security at a set price. The buyer of the call option has the right, but not the obligation, to buy an ...
s tend to have high betas (even compared to the underlying stock), and put options and
short position In finance, being short in an asset means investing in such a way that the investor will profit if the value of the asset falls. This is the opposite of a more conventional " long" position, where the investor will profit if the value of the ...
s and some inverse ETFs tend to have negative betas.


Importance as risk measure

Beta is the hedge ratio of an investment with respect to the stock market. For example, to hedge out the market-risk of a stock with a market beta of 2.0, an investor would short $2,000 in the stock market for every $1,000 invested in the stock. Thus insured, movements of the overall stock market no longer influence the combined position on average. Beta thus measures the contribution of an individual investment to the risk of the market portfolio that was not reduced by
diversification Diversification may refer to: Biology and agriculture * Genetic divergence, emergence of subpopulations that have accumulated independent genetic changes * Agricultural diversification involves the re-allocation of some of a farm's resources to n ...
. It does not measure the risk when an investment is held on a stand-alone basis.


Technical aspects


Mathematical definition

The market beta \beta_ of an asset i, observed on t occasions, is defined by (and best obtained via) a linear regression of the rate of return r_ of asset i on the rate of return r_ of the (typically value-weighted) stock-market index m: :r_ = \alpha_ + \beta_ \cdot r_ + \varepsilon_, where \varepsilon_ is an unbiased error term whose squared error should be minimized. The coefficient \alpha_ is often referred to as the
alpha Alpha (uppercase , lowercase ; grc, ἄλφα, ''álpha'', or ell, άλφα, álfa) is the first letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of one. Alpha is derived from the Phoenician letter aleph , whic ...
. The ordinary least squares solution is :\beta_ = \frac , where \operatorname and \operatorname are the
covariance In probability theory and statistics, covariance is a measure of the joint variability of two random variables. If the greater values of one variable mainly correspond with the greater values of the other variable, and the same holds for the les ...
and variance operators. Betas with respect to different market indexes are not comparable.


Relationship between own risk and beta risk

By using the relationship between
standard deviation In statistics, the standard deviation is a measure of the amount of variation or dispersion of a set of values. A low standard deviation indicates that the values tend to be close to the mean (also called the expected value) of the set, whil ...
and variance, \sigma \equiv \sqrt and the definition of correlation \rho_ \equiv \frac, market beta can also be written as :\beta_ = \rho_\frac, where \rho_ is the correlation of the two returns, and \sigma_, \sigma_ are the respective volatilities. This equation shows that the idiosyncratic risk (\sigma_) is related to but often very different to market beta. If the idiosyncratic risk is 0 (i.e., the stock returns do not move), so is the market-beta. The reverse is not the case: A coin toss bet has a zero beta but not zero risk. Attempts have been made to estimate the three ingredient components separately, but this has not led to better estimates of market-betas.


Adding an asset to the market portfolio

Suppose an investor has all his money in the market m and wishes to move a small amount into asset class i. The new portfolio is defined by :r_ = (1 - \delta) r_ + \delta r_. The variance can be computed as :\operatorname(r_) = (1 - \delta)^ \operatorname(r_) + 2 \delta (1 - \delta) \operatorname(r_, r_) + \delta^ \operatorname(r_) . For small values of \delta, the terms in \delta^ can be ignored, :\operatorname(r_) \approx (1 - 2 \delta) \operatorname(r_) + 2 \delta \operatorname(r_,r_). Using the definition of \beta_ = \operatorname(r_, r_) / \operatorname(r_), this is :\operatorname(r_) / \operatorname(r_) \approx 1 + 2 \delta (\beta_ - 1). This suggests that an asset with \beta greater than 1 increases the portfolio variance, while an asset with \beta less than 1 decreases it ''if'' added in a small amount.


Beta as a linear operator

Market-beta can be weighted, averaged, added, etc. That is, if a portfolio consists of 80% asset A and 20% asset B, then the beta of the portfolio is 80% times the beta of asset A and 20% times the beta of asset B. :r_ = w_ \cdot r_ + w_ \cdot r_ \Rightarrow \beta_ = w_ \cdot \beta_ + w_ \cdot \beta_ .


Choice of market portfolio and risk-free rate

In practice, the choice of index makes relatively little difference in the market betas of individual assets, because broad value-weighted market indexes tend to move closely together. Academics tend to prefer to work with a value-weighted market portfolio due to its attractive aggregation properties and its close link with the CAPM. Practitioners tend to prefer to work with the S&P500 due to its easy in-time availability and availability to hedge with stock index futures. A reasonable argument can be made that the U.S. stock market is too narrow, omitting all sorts of other domestic and international
asset classes In finance, an asset class is a group of financial instruments that have similar financial characteristics and behave similarly in the marketplace. We can often break these instruments into those having to do with real assets and those having ...
. Thus another occasional choice would be the use of international indexes, such as the
MSCI EAFE The MSCI EAFE Index is a stock market index that is designed to measure the equity market performance of developed markets outside of the U.S. & Canada. It is maintained by MSCI Inc., a provider of investment decision support tools; the EAFE acro ...
. However, even these indexes have returns that are surprisingly similar to the stock market. A benchmark can even be chosen to be similar to the assets chosen by the investor. For example, for a person who owns S&P 500 index funds and gold bars, the index would combine the S&P 500 and the price of gold. However, the resulting beta would no longer be a market-beta in the typical meaning of the term. The choice of whether to subtract the risk-free rate (from both own returns and market rates of return) before estimating market-betas is similarly inconsequential. When this is done, usually one selects an interest rate equivalent to the time interval (i.e., a one-day or one-month Treasury interest rate.)


Empirical estimation

It is important to distinguish between a true market-beta that defines the true expected relationship between the rate of return on assets and the market, and a realized market-beta that is based on historical rates of returns and represents just one specific history out of the set of possible stock return realizations. The true market-beta could be viewed as the average outcome if infinitely many draws could be observed---but because observing more than one draw is never strictly the case, the true market-beta can never be observed ''even in retrospect''. Only the realized market-beta can be observed. However, ''on average'', the best forecast of the realized market-beta is also the best forecast of the true market-beta.
Estimator In statistics, an estimator is a rule for calculating an estimate of a given quantity based on observed data: thus the rule (the estimator), the quantity of interest (the estimand) and its result (the estimate) are distinguished. For example, the ...
s of market-beta have to wrestle with two important problems: # The underlying market betas are known to move over time. # Investors are interested in the best forecast of the true prevailing market-beta most indicative of the most likely ''future market-beta'' realization (which will be the realized risk contribution to their portfolios) and not in the ''historical market-beta''. Despite these problems, a historical beta estimator remains an obvious benchmark predictor. It is obtained as the slope of the fitted line from the linear least-squares estimator. The OLS regression can be estimated on 1–5 years worth of daily, weekly or monthly stock returns. The choice depends on the trade off between accuracy of beta measurement (longer periodic measurement times and more years give more accurate results) and historic firm beta changes over time (for example, due to changing sales products or clients).


Improved estimators

Other beta estimators reflect the tendency of betas (like rates of return) for regression toward the mean, induced not only by measurement error but also by underlying changes in the true beta and/or historical randomness. (Intuitively, one would not suggest a company with high return .g., a drug discoverylast year also to have as high a return next year.) Such estimators include the Blume/Bloomberg beta (used prominently on many financial websites), the Vasicek beta, the Scholes-Williams beta, and the Dimson beta. * The ''Blume beta'' estimates the future beta as 2/3 times the historical OLS beta plus 1/3 times the number 1. A version based on monthly rates of return is widely distributed by Capital IQ and quoted on all financial websites. It predicts future market-beta poorly. * The ''Vasicek beta'' varies the weight between the historical OLS beta and the number 1 (or the average market beta if the portfolio is not value-weighted) by the volatility of the stock and the heterogeneity of betas in the overall market. It can be viewed either as an optimal
Bayesian estimator In estimation theory and decision theory, a Bayes estimator or a Bayes action is an estimator or decision rule that minimizes the posterior expected value of a loss function (i.e., the posterior expected loss). Equivalently, it maximizes the po ...
or a random-effects estimator under the (violated) assumption that the underlying market-beta does not move. It is modestly difficult to implement. It performs modestly better than the OLS beta. * The ''Scholes-Williams and Dimson betas'' are estimators that account for infrequent trading causing non-synchronously quoted prices. They are rarely useful when stock prices are quoted at day's end and easily available to analysts (as they are in the US), because they incur an efficiency loss when trades are reasonably synchronous. However, they can be very useful in cases in which frequent trades are not observed (e.g., as in private equity) or in markets with rare trading activity. These estimators attempt to uncover the instant prevailing market-beta. When long-term market-betas are required, further regression toward the mean over long horizons should be considered.


Equilibrium use: fair reward for risk?

In the idealized
capital asset pricing model In finance, the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is a model used to determine a theoretically appropriate required rate of return of an asset, to make decisions about adding assets to a well-diversified portfolio. The model takes into accou ...
(CAPM), beta risk is the only kind of risk for which investors should receive an expected return higher than the risk-free rate of interest. This is discussed in the CAPM article and the Security Market Line article. When used within the context of the CAPM, beta becomes a measure of the appropriate expected rate of return. Due to the fact that the overall rate of return on the firm is weighted rate of return on its debt and its equity, the market-beta of the overall unlevered firm is the weighted average of the firm's debt beta (often close to 0) and its levered equity beta.


Use in performance measurement

In fund management, adjusting for exposure to the market separates out the component that fund managers should have received given that they had their specific exposure to the market. For example, if the stock market went up by 20% in a given year, and a manager had a portfolio with a market-beta of 2.0, this portfolio should have returned 40% in the absence of specific stock picking skills. This is measured by the alpha in the market-model, holding beta constant.


Non-market betas

Occasionally, other betas than market-betas are used. The
arbitrage pricing theory In finance, arbitrage pricing theory (APT) is a multi-factor model for asset pricing which relates various macro-economic (systematic) risk variables to the pricing of financial assets. Proposed by economist Stephen Ross in 1976, it is widely bel ...
(APT) has multiple factors in its model and thus requires multiple betas. (The CAPM has only one risk factor, namely the overall market, and thus works only with the plain beta.) For example, a beta with respect to
oil price The price of oil, or the oil price, generally refers to the spot price of a barrel () of benchmark crude oil—a reference price for buyers and sellers of crude oil such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI), Brent Crude, Dubai Crude, OPEC R ...
changes would sometimes be called an "oil-beta" rather than "market-beta" to clarify the difference. Betas commonly quoted in mutual fund analyses often measure the exposure to a specific fund benchmark, rather than to the overall stock market. Such a beta would measure the risk from adding a specific fund to a holder of the mutual fund benchmark portfolio, rather than the risk of adding the fund to a portfolio of the market.


Special cases

Utility stocks commonly show up as examples of low beta. These have some similarity to bonds, in that they tend to pay consistent dividends, and their prospects are not strongly dependent on economic cycles. They are still stocks, so the market price will be affected by overall stock market trends, even if this does not make sense. Foreign stocks may provide some diversification. World benchmarks such as S&P Global 100 have slightly lower betas than comparable US-only benchmarks such as
S&P 100 The S&P 100 Index is a stock market index of United States stocks maintained by Standard & Poor's. Index options on the S&P 100 are traded with the ticker symbol "OEX". Because of the popularity of these options, investors often refer to the i ...
. However, this effect is not as good as it used to be; the various markets are now fairly correlated, especially the US and Western Europe. Derivatives are examples of non-linear assets. Beta relies on a linear model. An out of the money option may have a distinctly non-linear payoff. The change in price of an option relative to the change in the price of the underlying asset (for example a stock) is not constant. For example, if one purchased a put option on the S&P 500, the beta would vary as the price of the underlying index (and indeed as volatility, time to expiration and other factors) changed. (see options pricing, and
Black–Scholes model The Black–Scholes or Black–Scholes–Merton model is a mathematical model for the dynamics of a financial market containing derivative investment instruments. From the parabolic partial differential equation in the model, known as the Black� ...
).


See also

*
Alpha (finance) Alpha is a measure of the active return on an investment, the performance of that investment compared with a suitable market index. An alpha of 1% means the investment's return on investment over a selected period of time was 1% better than the m ...
* Betavexity * CSS Theory - Beta *
Cost of capital In economics and accounting, the cost of capital is the cost of a company's funds (both debt and equity), or from an investor's point of view is "the required rate of return on a portfolio company's existing securities". It is used to evaluate ne ...
*
Financial risk Financial risk is any of various types of risk associated with financing, including financial transactions that include company loans in risk of default. Often it is understood to include only downside risk, meaning the potential for financia ...
* Hamada's equation * List of financial performance measures *
Macro risk Macro risk is financial risk that is associated with macroeconomic or political factors. There are at least three different ways this phrase is applied. It can refer to economic or financial risk found in stocks and funds, to political risk found i ...
* Pure play method *
Risk factor (finance) In finance, risk factors are the building blocks of investing, that help explain the systematic returns in equity market, and the possibility of losing money in investments or business adventures.Roncalli, T. (2014). Strategy - Risk factor investin ...
*
Treynor ratio The Treynor reward to volatility model (sometimes called the reward-to-volatility ratio or Treynor measure), named after Jack L. Treynor, is a measurement of the returns earned in excess of that which could have been earned on an investment that h ...
* WACC


References


External links


ETFs & Diversification: A Study of Correlations

Calculate Beta in a SpreadsheetFree Beta Calculator for any Asset-Index pairCalculate Sharpe Ratio in ExcelCalculate Beta in ExcelOnline Portfolio Beta Calculator
{{DEFAULTSORT:Beta (Finance) Mathematical finance Fundamental analysis Financial ratios Statistical ratios ja:資本コスト#β値(ベータ値)