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Does your investment generate Alpha or just Beta?
blog.usfreedomcap.com/does-your-investment-generate-alpha-or-just-beta
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In the last decade, investors have been erroneously assigning their portfolio returns as
Alpha. Though passionate, many of these investors are unable to truly measure whether
these returns are a product of outperforming market indices, and skill. While non-skilled
based returns (Beta), provide an investor with decent returns, they are often susceptible to
hidden market risk. Investors who want to avoid risk, and simultaneously earn steady
returns that beat the market should establish a keen understanding of how Alpha and Beta
differ.
Alpha measures the performance of your assets in comparison to a benchmarked index
such as Nifty or Sensex. If your assets gained 5% in comparison to Sensex, which gained
2%, then your Alpha is considered to be “3” i.e. your assets performed 3% better than the
benchmarked returns. On the corollary, if in case your assets gained 2% while the Sensex
gained 5%, your Alpha is “-3” it means the performance of your investments was lower than
the average market gains.
Beta, on the other hand, refers to the sensitivity of your assets’ performance in relation to
the benchmarked index. For example, if your assets have a Beta of 1, they move in line with
the market rally. If they have a Beta greater than 1, implies your assets are more volatile
and will rally higher than the market both upwards and downwards. A Beta higher than 1
indicates assets will gain with greater returns in a bull run and will lose much more value in
case of a bear run.
Now, every investor likes to maximize their returns on a given portfolio. In chasing the
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same, the two things they get blind sighted with are risk-adjusted return (which in fact
creates Alpha) and volatility of the underlying portfolio. When 2017 ended every investor
created wealth in excess of 30% in Indian equities capping a great year for equity investors.
However, come 2018, the same investors again began chasing Alpha, and as the year drew
to an end, mid-cap and small-cap stocks declined by -13.5% and -23.5% respectively while
Nifty ended hardly 2% positive even as the journey was extremely volatile
Refer to the chart below
Hence was your quest for Alpha justified??
Can volatility alone lead to wealth creation over time?
Investors usually follow the path of chasing Beta in expectations of an economic upturn.
Investors favouring high Beta assets often argue that while volatile investments have a
tendency to lose some value, they almost immediately gain that in the next upswing.
However, there is a big difference in these series of returns. Let’s look at an example:
Mr. A invests INR 10 lacs in a high Beta asset. If the portfolio drops by 10% in its first year
the asset value drops to INR 9 Lacs. During the next upswing, Mr. A gains 10% bringing his
portfolio up to INR 9.9 Lacs. Despite the increase and decrease in asset value is exactly the
same mathematically, Mr. A has still lost INR 10k at the end of the 2 years.
Due to differences in returns across sectors, investors need to justify the investments in
volatile stocks with greater expected returns to compensate for the compounded loss of
investments due to volatility over a period of time. And, while volatility has the possibility of
bringing quick returns in the short term, it is quite detrimental for long term asset creation.
While there is no right or wrong strategy, one must really evaluate what the overall
objective of the investment is. While high Beta assets have their benefits in terms of high
returns in an upward trend, it is imperative you balance that with a well-diversified global
portfolio of assets to balance out the volatility.
What does this mean for you as an investor?
Preservation of wealth is as important as the creation of wealth, especially wealth which
has been generated out of a volatile asset class, like equities. Investors are better off not
riding the same volatile cycle which helped them earn their wealth in the first place
because the wealth creation cycle, especially in equities, is non-linear and may lead to
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significant wealth erosion. In search of Alpha, investors tend to expose their portfolio to
higher volatility which significantly impacts wealth creation. In an equity downtrend, a
highly volatile investment portfolio generates Beta which outplays Alpha created, if any,
and results in wealth erosion.
Hence investors are better off reallocating a part of their investment proceeds into a more
stable asset class with a predictable return on investment especially if the same investment
is backed by the most stable currency in the world, the USD.
Sources: http://www.niftyindices.com/market-data/advanced-charting?
Iname=Nifty%20High%20Beta%2050; https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/wealth/invest/shouldyou-opt-for-high-risk-Beta-stocks-over-quality/articleshow/-.cms
Topics: Sensex, Nifty, Investment, Portfolio, Alpha, Beta, Sensitivity, volatility, Indian
Equities, Stocks, Stock Market, Dollar Investment, Dollar, Stable Investment, USD
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