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{{ | {{def!Beta|/ˈbiːtə/|n|}}So-so. Ordinary. Unspectacular. Safe. Dull. Meets expectations. Won’t try to rip you off. | ||
Defined in a famous paper by William Sharpe in 1964 — he of the [[Sharpe ratio]] — [[beta]] is defined as | Defined in a famous paper by William Sharpe in 1964 — he of the [[Sharpe ratio]] — [[beta]] is defined as: ''“a portfolio risk that cannot be diversified away by adding more securities to it.”'' | ||
Since the whole market has all the securities in it, you can’t add to that, the whole market has a beta of 1. | |||
Therefore, to track [[beta]] is to track the whole market’s performance. Therefore watch out for — well, to put not to fine a point on it — ''bullshit'' products claiming to yield returns like “[[intelligent beta]]”; “[[smart beta]]” or “[[enhanced beta]]”. Nonsense on stilts. | |||
Good article [https://portfoliosolutions.com/latest-learnings/blog/no-such-thing-better-beta here]. | Good article [https://portfoliosolutions.com/latest-learnings/blog/no-such-thing-better-beta here]. | ||
{{Greeks}} | {{Greeks}} |