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When markets rise or fall, some stocks barely budge while others swing wildly. Beta is the metric investors use to measure that difference, showing how sensitive a stock’s price is to broader market movements, typically expressed relative to a primary stock market index such as the S&P 500.
A stock’s beta value helps investors understand whether it tends to move more or less aggressively than the benchmark index they follow. By definition, the broader market has a beta of precisely 1.0. This means that if a stock also has a beta of 1.0, it is likely to move in line with the market.
Stocks with betas higher than 1.0 are considered more volatile than the market, while stocks with betas lower than 1.0 are considered less volatile. The beta of a stock is statistically calculated by comparing the stock’s historical performance with that of its benchmark index over a specific time period. It is calculated using regression analysis to estimate how closely a stock’s returns track movements in the broader market.
Beta compares a stock’s historical price movements to a benchmark index over a set period, using statistical analysis.
SPY tracks the S&P 500, so it effectively carries a beta of 1.0.
If SPY rises 1%, a stock with a beta of 1.5 would be expected to rise about 1.5%
If SPY falls 1%, that same stock could drop around 1.5%
For investors, beta serves as a tool to evaluate how a stock may perform under different market conditions, particularly its responsiveness to overall market movements.
Beta is also a key component of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), a widely used financial framework that links expected returns to risk. Under CAPM, expected returns increase with beta, reflecting investors’ demand for higher compensation as risk rises.
Although beta is a valuable metric, it has several limitations investors should consider:
Because of these limitations, beta is most effective when used alongside other metrics, such as fundamentals, earnings growth, and qualitative analysis, rather than as a standalone investment criterion.
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