Stock Correlation

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Risk-Adjusted Indicators

There is a big difference between Yamaha Stock performing well and Yamaha Corp Company doing well as a business compared to the competition. There are so many exceptions to the norm that investors cannot definitively determine what's good or bad unless they analyze Yamaha Corp's multiple risk-adjusted performance indicators across the competitive landscape. These indicators are quantitative in nature and help investors forecast volatility and risk-adjusted expected returns across various positions.
Mean DeviationJensen AlphaSortino RatioTreynor RatioSemi DeviationExpected ShortfallPotential UpsideValue @RiskMaximum Drawdown
APC  0.90  0.23  0.18  1.20  0.93 
 1.81 
 4.97 
APC  0.84  0.26  0.19  0.93  0.98 
 1.88 
 5.24 
APC  0.85  0.23  0.19  0.68  0.86 
 2.06 
 4.50 
APC  0.92  0.24  0.16  20.15  1.07 
 2.22 
 6.45 
APC  0.91  0.23  0.20  5.09  0.79 
 2.33 
 5.24 
APC  0.85  0.25  0.20  1.43  0.99 
 1.88 
 6.46 
MSF  0.96  0.11  0.07  0.58  1.24 
 2.55 
 8.71 
MSF  1.04  0.09  0.05  1.34  1.36 
 2.35 
 9.11 
MSF  1.00  0.11  0.06  1.06  1.48 
 2.42 
 11.42 
MSF  0.93  0.09  0.04 (9.07) 1.35 
 2.04 
 8.79 
Correlation between equity instruments represents the relationship that exists between their respective price movements. Correlation is expected to be measured over a period of months or years to get a sense of how two or more assets move together over a selected time horizon. An investor can get a sense of how instruments are correlated by looking at how they outperform or underperform their average return over time. Understanding the correlation between positions in your existing portfolios will give you a good insight into your portfolios' volatility under different market scenarios.
An investor can reduce portfolio risk only by holding instruments that are not perfectly correlated. In other words, investors can reduce their exposure to individual asset risk by holding a diversified portfolio of assets. Diversification will allow for the same portfolio return with reduced risk. This stock correlation screener helps you find relationships between any equity instruments and their respective price or return movements over time enabling you to manage your portfolio risk more effectively.


About correlation table

The correlation table is a two-dimensional matrix that shows the correlation coefficient between pairs of securities. The cells in the table are color-coded to highlight significantly positive and negative relationships. The Macroaxis Correlation Table is a table showing correlation coefficients between stocks, funds, ETFs, or cryptocurrencies. Each cell in the table shows the correlation between one pair of equities.

About correlation cloud

Correlation cloud is a flat representation of correlation coefficients between pairs of securities. The links in the cloud are color-coded to highlight significantly positive and negative relationships. The Macroaxis Correlation Cloud is a scaled text that shows correlation coefficients between stocks, funds, ETFs, or cryptocurrencies. Each text element in the cloud shows the correlation between one pair of equities.

To create correlation table or cloud specify valid comma-separated symbols and hit Build It button.

Please note, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and American Stock Exchange (AMEX) have recently merged. Although Macroaxis has implemented solutions to handle this transition gracefully, you may still find some securities that may not be fully transferred from one exchange to another.