Expert Guidance:
Evaluating risk and return
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Evaluating risk and return
1.Evaluating risk and return
2.What's investment risk?
Risk & return
Spread the risk
Invest for consistent returns
Risk and time
What the risks are
Currency risk
Interest-rate risk
Comparing risks
Using benchmarks
Risk measurements
Look sharpe
3. Researching investments
4. Selling investments
5. Using options
6. Develop your investing savvy
 
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Using benchmarks

One standard way to measure performance, whether of an individual security or a portfolio of securities, is to compare it to the appropriate benchmark: the S&P 500-stock Index for large-cap stocks, the Russell 2000 for small-cap stocks, or the Dow Jones 20 Bond Average for high-grade corporate bonds.

But benchmarks have limitations when you use them to assess and manage risk.
Although indexes record volatility, they are trailing indicators, which means they report what has happened but not what is likely to happen. While there is often a correlation between past and future performance, there are no guarantees.
Most stock indexes, because they are either capitalization-weighted or price-weighted, are driven by the performance of a small percentage of the total number of stocks in the index — those that are either the largest or the most expensive. As a result, what their movements show is not always indicative of, or even relevant to, the larger group in the index, or to your own portfolio.
A little square

To decide which index is the most appropriate for an individual investment, you can evaluate the extent to which an investment correlates with an index by researching its r-square. An r-square of 0 means there is no correlation at all, while 100 means there is perfect correlation.
 
Thomas J. DorseyThomas J. Dorsey, President and co-founder of Dorsey, Wright & Associates

To see a family of indexes, make a selection from the links below.
Amex indexes
Dow Jones indexes
NYSE indexes
Russell indexes
Value Line indexes
 
         
   
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