Enter Values
Quick Reference
- Positive alpha = Outperformed CAPM expectations
- Negative alpha = Underperformed CAPM expectations
- All inputs must be annualized from the same period
- Measures manager skill vs passive market exposure
Jensen's Alpha Result
Formula Breakdown
Interpretation
Your portfolio generated 2.00% more return than CAPM predicted for its level of systematic risk. This positive alpha suggests the portfolio outperformed risk-adjusted expectations.
Rating Guide
These are general guidelines for context. Meaningful alpha analysis requires comparing portfolios with similar objectives over identical time periods.
| Negative | Significant underperformance | |
| Below Expected | Underperforming expectations | |
| At Expected | In line with CAPM | |
| Above Expected | Moderate outperformance | |
| Good | Strong outperformance | |
| Exceptional | Verify data accuracy |
Understanding Jensen's Alpha
What is Jensen's Alpha?
Jensen's alpha measures portfolio performance relative to what the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) predicts. Introduced by Michael Jensen in his 1968 paper "The Performance of Mutual Funds," it quantifies the excess return above or below what would be expected given the portfolio's systematic risk (beta).
In simple terms, alpha answers: "Did this portfolio outperform or underperform what CAPM predicted, given the market risk it took on?"
Understanding the Formula
Jensen's alpha uses CAPM to calculate what return you should have earned, then compares it to what you actually earned:
- Calculate Market Risk Premium: Rm − Rf (how much the market returned above the risk-free rate)
- Calculate Expected Return: Rf + β × (Rm − Rf) (what CAPM predicts for your beta level)
- Calculate Alpha: Actual Return − Expected Return (the difference is your alpha)
Alpha vs Other Metrics
Jensen's alpha is one of several risk-adjusted performance measures:
- Sharpe Ratio: Excess return per unit of total risk (standard deviation)
- Treynor Ratio: Excess return per unit of systematic risk (beta)
- Jensen's Alpha: Absolute performance vs CAPM benchmark (measures skill)
While Sharpe and Treynor are ratios that help compare portfolios, alpha is an absolute measure of outperformance or underperformance in percentage points.
Interpreting Results
- α > 0: Portfolio beat CAPM predictions—suggests good stock selection, market timing, or both
- α = 0: Portfolio matched CAPM predictions—no value added beyond market exposure
- α < 0: Portfolio missed CAPM predictions—could indicate poor decisions, high fees, or bad luck
Limitations
While valuable, Jensen's alpha has important limitations:
- CAPM assumptions: The model assumes market efficiency, single-period returns, and no transaction costs
- Beta estimation: Alpha is only as reliable as your beta estimate, which varies with methodology
- Statistical significance: Short-term alpha may be luck; only sustained alpha over multiple years is meaningful
- Past performance: Historical alpha doesn't guarantee future alpha
Consider using Jensen's alpha alongside the Sharpe ratio, Treynor ratio, and CAPM calculator for a complete picture of portfolio performance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational and informational purposes only. Jensen's alpha is a historical measure that uses past data and may not predict future performance. The rating thresholds are educational approximations, not fixed industry standards. Alpha significance depends on measurement period, statistical significance, and benchmark selection. Investment decisions should consider multiple factors beyond risk-adjusted returns. Always consult with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.