Nope the Beta I am talking about is not the Beta from Beta Thoughts but the Beta of financial markets. Few years or may be months back, see in the first few years of marriage time doesn’t matter :D but I am digressing. So few months back a longtime friend started discussing in his inimitable style yaar, what is this beta my collegues keep talking about. I didn’t knew a iota about this beta.
Then I started reading A Random Walk down Wall Street in July when I quoted the author about Madness of the Crowds. Books like Random Walk take its own sweet time to get digested. I was only able to finish five chapters in the first go. I picked it again in this month of Oktoberfest while flying for work. I finally saw the light and now I know what is Beta. From the book
Beta is the numerical description of systematic risk. Despite the mathematical manipulations involved, the basic idea behind the beta measurement is one of putting some precise numbers on the subjective feelings money managers have had for years
…
The calculation begin by assigning a beta of 1 to a broad market index, such as NYSE index or the S&P 500. If a stock has a beta of 2, then on average it swings twice as far as the market. If the market rises by 10 percent, the stock rises by 20 percent. If a stock has a beta of 0.5, it tends to be more stable than the market (it will go up or down 5 percent when the market rises or declines by 10 percent).
Isn’t it easy.
Â
3 Responses
Nilesh Chandra
October 13th, 2005 at 10:53 pm
1And now, thou hath mastered the basics of the CAPM, for which these dudes got a Nobel!
Isn’t it amazing how the discovery of incredibly simple stuff always gets people a Nobel. Perhaps the discovery of incredible phenomena is easy, it is the simple stuff that’s hard.
Why this conundrum? 5000 years of civilization and we (mankind) still have trouble with the simple stuff.
Pankaj Narula
October 14th, 2005 at 8:58 pm
2Very true indeed.
Nilesh, reading theory is fine but it is the practice of these ideas that will win the cake. Still after reading these books I think of my investments of dot-com days and smile, I was no different than a gambler. Let us see what this new found knowledge will do.
But this has given me new worries, now I worry about inflation and the exchange rates :O|
-Pankaj
sandeep
January 26th, 2006 at 9:45 pm
3Arre Dost yeah konse chaqar mein padd gaye ho..
For so long in India wehave known, whenever you have to make an investment, you should always think about your beta or beta’s. Kyonki purano mein bhi likha hai that your beta i.e. son is the only investment if you can get right will payoff you in your late life.
i was just trying to apply the “beta” thoughts to the stocks in the indian market and somehow over the last two years, its just been phenomenal, sometimes i felt it would haven been good, had i gambled… then believing myself to be an investor.. anyways thats me… But still you are right It’s good to have known beta’s then unknowns beta’s otherwise you will end up paying a lot in the form of child care allowances.
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply
Categories
Blogs I Read
Hindi Blogs
Welcome
Now Reading
Planned books:
Current books:
Micromotives and Macrobehavior by Thomas C. Schelling
The Business of Software: What Every Manager, Programmer, and Entrepreneur Must Know to Thrive and S by Michael A. Cusumano
Recent books:
View full Library