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Indestata > Investing > Alpha Vs. Beta In Investing: What’s The Difference?
Investing

Alpha Vs. Beta In Investing: What’s The Difference?

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: August 28, 2025 10 Min Read
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Key takeaways

  • Alpha and beta are two ways to measure investment performance and whether investment performance is due to individual skill or just the market’s movement.
  • Professional investors are seeking to generate alpha to help justify their fees, since individuals could get “beta level” returns and pay low fees.
  • Anyone can generate beta level returns by buying an S&P 500 index fund or another similar broad-based index fund.

Alpha and beta are two terms that get thrown around a lot in investing. They sound complicated, but they’re actually much simpler than they seem. Here’s what you need to know about alpha and beta in investing and the difference between the two terms.

What is alpha in investing?

Alpha measures the return on an investment above what would be expected based on its level of risk. It’s also sometimes used as a simple measure of whether an asset outperformed an appropriate benchmark. For example, professionals at an actively managed mutual fund may measure their performance against an index such as the S&P 500 to see whether they’re outperforming it.

How to calculate alpha

Alpha is sometimes casually referred to as a measure of outperformance, meaning the alpha is the difference between what an asset or investment fund returned and what its benchmark returned. For example, if a stock fund returned 12 percent and the S&P 500 returned 10 percent, the alpha would be 2 percent.

But alpha should really be used to measure return in excess of what would be expected for a given level of risk. If the fund manager outperformed an index, it may have been because the fund assumed more risk than that of the index.

To figure the expected return for an investment’s level of risk, analysts use beta, which measures an asset’s volatility and can be used to gauge risk. If a stock has a beta of 1.2, it might be considered 20 percent riskier than the benchmark and therefore should compensate investors with a higher expected return. If the index returned 10 percent, the stock should return 12 percent. If instead, the stock returned 14 percent, the additional 2 percent would be considered alpha.

Examples of alpha

Alpha is most often used in the fund industry (mutual funds or ETFs) to measure a portfolio manager’s skill, especially for hedge funds and others looking to outperform an index. Generating alpha is the goal of active fund managers since they want to earn returns above what would be expected for a given level of risk-taking.

A fund manager may generate alpha over any time horizon, but it’s most valuable when it’s generated consistently over long periods. Legendary investor Warren Buffett’s company Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) has outperformed the S&P 500 by nearly 10 percent annually since 1965. This means that a $1,000 investment in the S&P 500 at the beginning of 1965 would have been worth about $391,540 at the end of 2024, whereas the same investment in Berkshire would have been worth about $55 million. That’s a lot of alpha.

What is beta in investing?

Beta, or the beta coefficient, measures volatility relative to the market and can be used as a risk measure. By definition, the stock market always has a beta of 1, so betas above 1 are considered more volatile than the market, while betas below 1 are considered less volatile.

How to calculate beta

Beta is calculated by taking the covariance between the return of an asset and the return of the market and dividing it by the variance of the market. The measure is backward-looking because you’re using historical data in the calculation of beta. Beta may or may not be a useful measure on a go-forward basis.

Fortunately, you won’t have to calculate the beta for each stock you’re looking at. The beta for any stock can be found on most popular financial websites or through your online broker.

Examples of beta

Here are three popular securities and their betas as of Aug. 27, 2025.

  • Vanguard 500 Index Fund (VOO) – 1.00
  • Tesla (TSLA) – 2.33
  • Walmart (WMT) – 0.66

Different investors might be interested in each of those investments for different reasons. A passive investor looking to earn the market return might choose the Vanguard index fund, while a more aggressive investor who is comfortable with higher levels of risk might select Tesla. Conservative investors looking for stability might select Walmart because of its low expected volatility.

Differences between alpha and beta

Though they’re both Greek letters, alpha and beta are quite different from each other. Alpha is a way to measure excess return, while beta is used to measure the volatility, or risk, of an asset.

Beta might also be referred to as the return you can earn by passively owning the market. You can’t earn alpha by investing in a benchmark index fund such as an S&P 500 index fund, which is the definition of beta.

Alpha Beta
What it measures Investment return above expected return, given the risk The investment return relative to the market’s volatility
Why it’s useful It shows whether an investor is bringing skill to their investments Provides a baseline of expected returns for given risk or volatility
How you earn it Finding investments that outperform relative to their expected return Buying a broad-based index fund such as one based on the S&P 500, which by definition delivers beta

How do you use alpha and beta in investing

Alpha and beta can provide investors with useful information to make investment decisions, if they’re trying to decide between funds. 

For example, alpha shows whether a professional investor is generating extra returns above what’s expected given the risk they’re taking. That can help investors decide if a fund is delivering returns through skill and not just taking extra risk to generate returns. 

Alpha is important then for evaluating professional managers, who are typically paid more — often much more — than a passively managed fund to generate returns. If your fund manager is being paid more, you want to make sure they’re not just taking more risk to generate higher returns but that they’re getting the extra juice from that risk. Any investor can take extra risk and generate higher returns for a short period, but alpha helps you understand if an investor is getting extra return for the risk. 

If you’re not getting that extra alpha for the higher fees to the investment manager, then it could make sense to move to a broad-based index fund. The best index funds charge low expense ratios and deliver beta — the expected return for the risk. Most professionals fail to beat their investment benchmarks while charging higher fees, meaning that investors would be better off by simply buying the benchmark, earning higher returns and still paying lower fees.

Bottom line

While alpha and beta might sound like complex and intimidating financial terms, they’re really just ways to measure risk and return. While you might consider both measures before making an investment, it is important to remember that they’re backward-looking. Historical alpha isn’t a guarantee of future results and an asset’s volatility can fluctuate from one day to the next.

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