Alpha tells you whether the fund has produced returns justifying the risks it is taking. It does this by comparing its actual return to the one 'predicted' by the beta. Say, a fund can be expected to earn a return of 15 per cent in a year (based on its beta). However, it actually fetches you 18 per cent. Then the alpha of the fund is 3 (18 - 15 = 3). In other words, alpha is a measure of selection risk (also known as residual risk) of a mutual fund in relation to the market. A positive alpha is the extra return awarded to the investor for taking a risk, instead of accepting the market return.
Alpha can be seen as a measure of a fund manager's performance. This is what the fund has earned over and above (or under) what it was expected to earn. Thus, this is the value added (or subtracted) by the fund manager's investment decisions. A passive fund has an alpha of 0. That's why index funds always have-or should have, if they track their benchmark index perfectly-an alpha of 0. An active fund's alpha is a measure of what the fund manager's activity has contributed to the fund's returns.
Alpha is the portfolio's risk-adjusted performance or the 'value added' provided by a manager. Mathematically, alpha is the incremental difference between a manager's actual results and his expected results, given the level of risk. A positive alpha indicates that a portfolio has produced returns above the expected level--at the same level of risk--and a negative alpha suggests the portfolio underperformed given the level of risk assumed. So two fund managers may beat the same benchmark, but only one may outperform on a risk-adjusted basis. That one has got the alpha.
Alpha is one of the five technical risk ratios used in Modern Portfolio Theory. The other four are beta, R-squared, standard deviation and the Sharpe Ratio. All these statistical measurements help investors determine the risk-reward profile of a mutual fund.
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