Beta Calculator
Calculate stock beta (β) from return series or variance/covariance inputs. Includes Blume adjusted beta, Hamada equation for levered/unlevered beta, CAPM expected return, and R² explanatory power.
Beta (β)
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Correlation (r) —
R² (Explanatory Power) —
Interpretation —
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Beta (β)
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Note —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Beta Variants
Unlevered Beta (β_U) —
Adjusted Beta (Blume) —
CAPM Output
CAPM Expected Return —
Equity Risk Premium —
Hamada Equation
Hamada Equation —
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter Stock Returns and Market Returns as comma-separated percentages for the same time periods.
- The calculator computes beta, correlation, and R² from the returns series.
- Use From Variance & Covariance tab if you have those statistics already.
- Use Adjusted Beta tab to apply Blume's mean-reversion adjustment.
- Open Professional for Hamada equation (levered/unlevered beta) and CAPM expected return.
Formula
β = Cov(stock, market) / Var(market)
Adjusted β (Blume) = 0.67 × β + 0.33
Unlevered β = β_L / (1 + (1−T) × D/E) (Hamada equation)
Example
Example: 5 monthly returns: Stock [2.1, −1.5, 3.8, 0.9, −0.7], Market [1.2, −0.8, 2.1, 0.5, −0.3]. Calculated beta = 1.52, correlation = 0.98, R² = 96%. Blume adjusted beta = 0.67 × 1.52 + 0.33 = 1.35.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Beta (β) measures a stock's sensitivity to market movements. A beta of 1.0 means the stock moves with the market. Beta > 1 means more volatile than the market; beta < 1 means less volatile. Beta = Cov(stock, market) / Var(market).
- Blume's (1975) adjustment corrects for beta's tendency to revert toward 1 over time. Adjusted β = 0.67 × Raw β + 0.33. A raw beta of 1.5 becomes adjusted beta of 1.34. Bloomberg and Barra use similar adjustments in their beta estimates.
- Unlevered beta (asset beta) removes the effect of financial leverage using the Hamada equation: β_U = β_L / (1 + (1−T) × D/E). It represents the risk of a company's operations alone, independent of capital structure. Useful for comparing firms with different leverage.
- R² (coefficient of determination) tells you how much of a stock's return variance is explained by market movements. R² = 0.30 means 30% of the stock's volatility is market-driven, and 70% is company-specific (idiosyncratic) risk.
- Beta is typically estimated using 2–5 years of monthly returns. Betas change over time as business mix, leverage, and competitive dynamics evolve. Bloomberg uses 2 years of weekly data; Value Line uses 5 years of monthly data. Recalculate quarterly for active analysis.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- Capital Asset Prices: A Theory of Market Equilibrium — Sharpe (1964) — Journal of Finance
- Damodaran Online — Beta Database & Estimation — NYU Stern
- Blume Adjusted Beta — CFA Institute — CFA Institute
- Beta — Investopedia — Investopedia
- Bloomberg Beta Methodology — Bloomberg Professional