The Treynor Index, more commonly known as the Treynor Ratio (See: Treynor Ratio), is a portfolio performance measure. It tells you the returns you’ve gotten per unit of risk taken.
The bigger your Treynor Index, the greater excess returns you have. The more bang for your buck, the more returns for risk taken. It’s a good metric to see if your balanced portfolio is performing remarkably well...or falling flat on its face.
Compared to many portfolio performance tools, it’s pretty simple, too. Just take your portfolio returns, subtract your risk-free rate, and divide by your portfolio’s beta. As we always say...beta to have more excess returns than none at all.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is Volatility?77 Views
In finance allah shmoop what is volatility beta this thing
that's the symbol for volatility on the street we mean
the wall one not the mean one and it is
so commonly used that the in crowd members just say
beta when they're referring to volatility unless they're from tennessee
in which case they say you ve all y'all all
right so here's a siri's of stock prices stamped each
day that has lo ve all or low beta and
here's a siri's that has high beta dead man's pulse
versus rocky mountains Well what makes a stock volatile uncertainty
Think about it this way If everyone knew for sure
what a given stocks earnings would be for the next
ten years quarter by quarter and they also knew what
the overall markets average earnings would be in a few
other things like revenue growth and world conditions and we're
going to be war inflation there wouldn't be a lot
of guesswork The quote right unquote price today would be
thirty two dollars eighty three cents and the quote right
unquote rate of compounding would be eight percent in the
stock would slowly go up but this rate but in
non disney land riel life well nobody really knows much
of anything So stockcharts look like this and nerve endings
of wall street traders look like this Neither of them 00:01:19.771 --> [endTime] looked much like this chart So that's all you
Up Next
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...
How does duration affect bonds (risk and volatility)? The longer the duration, or length of maturity in bonds, the greater the exposure that econom...