[R-SIG-Finance] Returns used to compute the alpha and the beta
Benoit Schmid
Benoit.Schmid at unige.ch
Mon Oct 27 14:01:01 CET 2008
Good morning,
Brian G. Peterson wrote:
> Classic CAPM alpha will not change based on the periodicity, as it
> measures the _portion_ of a set of returns that are not attributable
> to the benchmark return, and should be calculated with the highest
> regular periodicity available. Return.excess may calculate what you
> are referring to as "alpha" if by alpha you mean returns over a
> benchmark return, in which case you would first run Return.excess
> using the benchmark return as the parameter 'rf' and then cumulate
> your daily log returns to get a cumulative return over some other
> periodicity (annual in your query).
If I look at the Jengsen alpha définition, it is a linear combination of
return.
Therefore it is a return.
Therefore the daily Jengsen alpha is not equivalent as the yearly
Jengsen alpha.
Am I right?
If not, what I am missing?
What you are explaining to me is that The alpha is not the jengsen alpha
because it "measures the _portion_ of a set of returns".
By portion, you mean that it is a ratio of returns and not an absolute
return.
Am I right?
Thanks in advance for your answer.
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