• Alpha refers to any excess or deficient investment return after the return has been adjusted for the time value of money (the risk-free rate) and for the effects of bearing systematic risk (beta).
• Alpha can also refer to the extent to which the skill, information, and knowledge of an investment manager generates superior risk-adjusted returns (or inferior risk-adjusted return in the case of negative alpha).
➢ Note that the first interpretation can include high returns from luck.
• Not necessarily. While ex ante alpha may be viewed as expected idiosyncratic return, ex post alpha is realized idiosyncratic return. Simply put, ex post alpha is the extent to which an asset outperformed or underperformed its benchmark in a specified time period. Ex post alpha can be the result of luck and/or skill. To the extent that an investor suffers bad luck, ex ante will not guarantee ex post alpha.
• To identify ex ante alpha
• Beta drivers (or passive indexers)
• The significance level. The p-value is the output of the statistical computations.
• Selection bias is a distortion in relevant sample characteristics from the characteristics of the population, caused by the sampling method of selection or inclusion used by the data manager. If the selection bias originates from the decision of fund managers to report or not to report their returns, then the bias is referred to as a self-selection bias.
* Ordered listings of the variables and regression residuals
alpha driver
An investment that seeks high returns independent of the
market is this.
alternative hypothesis
is the behavior that the analyst
assumes would be true if the null hypothesis were rejected.
asset gatherers
are managers striving to deliver beta as
cheaply and efficiently as possible, and include the largescale
index trackers that produce passive products tied to
well-recognized financial market benchmarks.
backfill bias fund
or instant history bias, is when the funds,
returns, and strategies being added to a data set are not
representative of the universe of fund managers, fund returns,
and fund strategies.
backfilling
typically refers to the insertion of an actual trading
record of an investment into a database when that trading
record predates the entry of the investment into the database.
backtesting
is the use of historical data to test a strategy that
was developed subsequent to the observation of the data.
beta creep
is when hedge fund strategies pick up more
systematic market risk over time.
beta driver
An investment that moves in tandem with the overall market or
a particular risk factor is this.
beta expansion
is the perceived tendency of the systematic
risk exposures of a fund or asset to increase due to changes in
general economic conditions.
beta nonstationarity
is a general term that refers to the
tendency of the systematic risk of a security, strategy, or fund
to shift through time.
causality
The difference between true correlation and causality is that
causality reflects when one variable’s correlation with another
variable is determined by or due to the value or change in
value of the other variable.
cherry-picking
is the concept of extracting or publicizing
only those results that support a particular viewpoint.
chumming
is a fishing term used to describe scattering pieces
of cheap fish into the water as bait to attract larger fish to catch.
confidence interval
is a range of values within which a
parameter estimate is expected to lie with a given probability.