The β factor of a stock is the volatilty of the stock relative to that
of the market. |
β > 1 means the stock is more volatile than the market. |
β = 1 means the stock and the market are equally volatile. |
β < 1 means the stock is less volatile than the market. |
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The 1-4 diagonals of the tech stocks reflects larger daily percentage changes,
so we would expect higher volatility. |
As a quantitative test of this, Thornton scaled the bin boundaries with each
stock's β. For example, Qwest has β = 2.15, so the first and third
bin boundaries are set at 2.15⋅2.5% = 5.38% above and below 0. |
Here are the rescaled driven IFS (left), each grouped with its original (right) for
comparison. |
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American International: β = 0.85 |
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General Electric: β = 1.08 |
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Colgate-Palmolive: β = 0.76 |
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Note that in general rescaling the bin boundaries by the stock's β makes the
driven IFS look much alike. Note particularly the change in the Sonus IFS. |
The obvious exception is Tyson, whose β is so small that the rescaling puts
many more points into bins 1 and 4.
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