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Beta

Beta measures a security or portfolio's sensitivity to movements in a benchmark — usually the broad equity market. A beta of 1.0 moves with the market on average; 1.5 moves 50% more; 0.5 moves half as much. Beta is a foundational risk number but incomplete on its own; drawdown ...
Market beta Systematic risk Market sensitivity

How beta is calculated

Beta is the slope of the regression line between the security's returns and the benchmark's returns over a chosen period. Most published betas use trailing 60-month monthly returns or 36-month for shorter histories. Different periods produce different betas — published numbers from different sources often disagree.

What beta tells you

  • How much of the security's variance is explained by the market.
  • Expected sensitivity to broad market moves — useful for stress testing.
  • The component of return that is "rented" from the market vs. specific to the security.

What beta doesn't tell you

  1. Tail behavior — beta is calculated from average sensitivity; portfolios can have low beta in calm periods and high beta in crashes (correlation rises in stress).
  2. Idiosyncratic risk — security-specific risk not captured by the market relationship.
  3. Style and factor exposures — two portfolios with the same beta can have very different value/momentum/size tilts.
  4. Drawdown — beta says nothing about peak-to-trough loss potential.

Beta and benchmark selection

Beta is meaningful only relative to a benchmark. A small-cap fund's beta against the S&P 500 will differ from its beta against the Russell 2000 — and the right benchmark depends on what the manager actually does. Mismatched benchmarks produce misleading beta numbers that can flatter or punish a strategy.

How StratiFi thinks about beta

Beta is a useful summary number, not the whole story. The firms that use it well pair beta with concrete drawdown analysis, stress-test scenarios, and factor exposure — the combination tells the client what the portfolio does in different environments, not just on average.

Frequently asked questions

  • Can a stock have a beta below zero?

    Yes, mathematically — negative beta means the security moves opposite the benchmark on average. In practice, very few individual securities have meaningfully negative betas; some commodities and inverse funds do.
  • Is high beta the same as high risk?

    Not quite. Beta measures sensitivity to the benchmark; risk has many other dimensions (idiosyncratic, liquidity, credit, drawdown). High-beta portfolios are typically more risky, but the mapping is not one-to-one.
  • Why do different sources show different betas?

    Different periods, different benchmarks, different return frequencies (daily vs. monthly), and different statistical methods all produce different betas. The number is a function of the methodology, not just the security.