BETA

Beta is a risk measure comparing the volatility of a stock's price movement to the general market.

Overview

   Beta is derived from a formula that measures the volatility of a stock compared to the volatility of the market in general (as measured by a market index such as the S&P 500, DJIA, etc). Beta's companion measure for volatility is alpha.
   The Beta for a stock may vary in up- versus down-markets.
   Monthly data is preferred.


Beta provides a good idea of a stock's inherent risk or sensitivity to general market fluctuations.

Signals

High beta stocks react strongly to variations in the market, and low beta stocks are less affected by market variations.    If Beta is 1, then an issue has the same volatility as the general market. It is either growing at the same rate or declining at the same rate.
   If Beta is less than 1, then an issue is less volatile. At 0.5 it probably will move only 50% or a half of the market. If the market is in a downtrend, it will only lose 50% of what the general market loses.
   If beta is less than 0, then the stock is moving in a reverse pattern to the index. When the index moves up the stock declines and vice versa.


Calculating Beta

To calculate the 200-day Beta for a stock (in comparison to the S&P index), you would compute the 200 one-day percentage changes in S&P and the 200 one-day percentage changes in the stock. These calculations produce 200 ordered pairs that are then charted as a scatter graph, and the slope of the least-squares-fit line is the value for beta. (Alpha is the y-intercept of the least-squares-fit line.)

Information provided by chartfilter.com