What Is Beta?
How to Measure Stock Volatility and Use It in Your Screener
Beta (β) measures how much a stock’s price moves relative to the overall market. A beta of 1.0 means the stock tends to move in lockstep with the market. Above 1.0, it’s more volatile. Below 1.0, it’s calmer. Beta is the standard measure of systematic risk — and one of the most practical filters you can add to any stock screen.
β = Cov(Rstock, Rmarket) ÷ Var(Rmarket)
A stock with a beta of 1.5 has historically moved 50% more than the market in either direction. When the S&P 500 rises 10%, a 1.5-beta stock tends to rise 15%. When the market drops 10%, that same stock tends to fall 15%.
Beta answers one fundamental question: how much market risk am I taking with this stock?
TL;DR: Beta tells you how volatile a stock is compared to the market. A beta of 1.0 = market-level risk. Below 1.0 = less volatile. Above 1.0 = more volatile. It’s essential for risk management and shows up in almost every serious portfolio construction framework. You can filter by beta on ScreenerHub in seconds.
Why Beta Matters for Investors
Every stock carries two types of risk: risk unique to the company (missed earnings, a product recall, a management shakeup), and risk tied to the broader market (recessions, interest rate changes, geopolitical shocks). Beta isolates the second kind.
This matters because:
- Portfolio risk control. If your entire portfolio is high-beta stocks, a 10% market decline could wipe 15–20% off your holdings. Beta lets you calibrate how much market exposure you’re actually carrying.
- Strategy alignment. Aggressive growth investors seek high-beta stocks that amplify market rallies. Conservative income investors prefer low-beta stocks that hold steady during turbulence. Beta is the metric that separates these two approaches quantitatively.
- Benchmark comparison. When your portfolio returns 12% and the market returns 10%, did you actually outperform — or did you just take more risk? Beta is the denominator in that equation. Outperforming on a risk-adjusted basis is the real goal.
- Position sizing. Many portfolio managers size positions inversely to beta. A stock with a beta of 2.0 gets half the allocation of a stock with a beta of 1.0 — so each position contributes roughly equal risk to the overall portfolio.
How Beta Is Calculated
Beta is derived from a statistical regression of a stock’s returns against a market index (usually the S&P 500) over a set time period.
β = Cov(Rstock, Rmarket) ÷ Var(Rmarket)
Where:
- Rstock = historical returns of the stock
- Rmarket = historical returns of the market index
- Cov = covariance (how the two move together)
- Var = variance (how much the market moves on its own)
A simplified example
Suppose over the last 60 months, every time the S&P 500 went up 1%, Stock A went up 1.3% on average. And every time the S&P 500 dropped 1%, Stock A dropped 1.3%. Stock A's beta is approximately 1.3.
| Market Move | Stock A (β ≈ 1.3) | Stock B (β ≈ 0.6) | Stock C (β ≈ 1.0) |
|---|---|---|---|
| +10% | +13% | +6% | +10% |
| -10% | -13% | -6% | -10% |
| +5% | +6.5% | +3% | +5% |
| -5% | -6.5% | -3% | -5% |
These are averages — actual moves will vary. Beta describes a tendency, not a guarantee.
What time period is used?
Most financial data providers (including ScreenerHub) calculate beta using monthly returns over the trailing 5 years against the S&P 500. This is the industry standard established by services like Bloomberg, Morningstar, and Yahoo Finance.
Note: Short-term beta (calculated over 1 year or with daily returns) is noisier and can shift dramatically. Long-term beta is more stable and more useful for screening.
Understanding Beta Values
Here’s what different beta ranges actually tell you about a stock’s behavior:
| Beta Range | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| β < 0 | Moves opposite to the market. Extremely rare for individual stocks. |
| β = 0 | Completely uncorrelated with the market. Theoretical only. |
| 0 < β < 0.5 | Very low volatility. Moves much less than the market. |
| 0.5 ≤ β < 1.0 | Less volatile than the market. Defensive characteristics. |
| β = 1.0 | Moves with the market. Neutral risk profile. |
| 1.0 < β ≤ 1.5 | Moderately more volatile than the market. Growth-oriented. |
| 1.5 < β ≤ 2.0 | Significantly more volatile. Amplifies market swings. |
| β > 2.0 | Highly volatile. Extreme sensitivity to market direction. |
Beta by sector (U.S. market averages)
Just like the P/E ratio varies by sector, beta has strong sector patterns:
| Sector | Typical Beta Range |
|---|---|
| Technology | 1.1 – 1.6 |
| Consumer Discretionary | 1.0 – 1.4 |
| Financials | 1.0 – 1.5 |
| Energy | 0.9 – 1.5 |
| Industrials | 1.0 – 1.3 |
| Healthcare | 0.7 – 1.1 |
| Consumer Staples | 0.5 – 0.8 |
| Utilities | 0.3 – 0.6 |
| Real Estate (REITs) | 0.6 – 1.0 |
Takeaway: A beta of 1.2 in technology is normal. A beta of 1.2 in utilities would be highly unusual and worth investigating.
On ScreenerHub, you can combine the beta filter with sector and industry filters to screen within a specific sector — so your volatility comparisons are meaningful.
How to Use Beta in Stock Screening
Beta becomes a powerful portfolio construction tool when you combine it with other metrics in a stock screener. Here are four practical screens you can build on ScreenerHub:
Screen 1: Defensive low-volatility portfolio
Find stable companies that hold up during market downturns.
| Filter | Setting |
|---|---|
| Beta | 0.3 – 0.8 |
| Market cap | > $5B |
| Dividend yield | > 2% |
| Debt-to-equity | < 1.0 |
This screen targets large, financially healthy companies that move less than the market. Ideal for capital preservation, retirement portfolios, or investors who want to sleep well during corrections.
Screen 2: Aggressive growth (high beta)
Identify stocks that amplify market rallies — for investors who can stomach the swings.
| Filter | Setting |
|---|---|
| Beta | 1.3 – 2.0 |
| Revenue growth (1Y) | > 15% |
| Market cap | > $1B |
| ROE | > 12% |
High-beta stocks with strong revenue growth and solid profitability can deliver outsized returns in a bull market. The market cap floor filters out the most speculative micro-caps.
Screen 3: Risk-adjusted value
Find cheap stocks that aren’t volatile — the intersection of value and stability.
| Filter | Setting |
|---|---|
| Beta | 0.5 – 1.0 |
| P/E ratio | 5 – 15 |
| ROE | > 10% |
| Market cap | > $2B |
Combining low beta with a low P/E ratio gives you stocks that are both inexpensive and stable. This screen is the foundation of a value investing approach with built-in risk management.
Screen 4: Balanced core holdings
Build the core of your portfolio with market-tracking, quality companies.
| Filter | Setting |
|---|---|
| Beta | 0.8 – 1.2 |
| Market cap | > $10B |
| Dividend yield | > 1% |
| Revenue growth (1Y) | > 5% |
A beta near 1.0 means these stocks behave like the market itself — but you’re filtering for the highest-quality companies within that group. Great for a buy-and-hold core position.
Try it now: Open the Screener Studio and add a Beta filter. Set it to 0.3–0.8 to find low-volatility stocks, or 1.3–2.0 for high-volatility picks. Layer in market cap and sector to refine your results.
Beta in the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
Beta isn’t just a screening filter — it’s the central variable in one of finance’s most important formulas: the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM).
E(R) = Rf + β × (Rm - Rf)
Where:
- E(R) = expected return of the stock
- Rf = risk-free rate (typically the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield)
- Rm = expected return of the market
- β = the stock’s beta
What CAPM says
CAPM states that a stock’s expected return should compensate investors for two things: the time value of money (risk-free rate) and the amount of market risk they’re taking (measured by beta).
Example: If the risk-free rate is 4%, the expected market return is 10%, and a stock’s beta is 1.5:
E(R) = 4% + 1.5 × (10% - 4%) = 4% + 9% = 13%
The market expects this stock to return 13% annually to justify its higher risk. If the stock actually returns 8%, it’s underperforming on a risk-adjusted basis — even though 8% sounds decent in isolation.
Why this matters for screening
When you screen for stocks with a specific beta, you’re implicitly filtering by expected return and risk level. A portfolio of beta-0.5 stocks should return roughly half the market premium. A portfolio of beta-1.5 stocks needs to deliver 50% more than the market premium to justify the extra risk.
This is why many investors combine beta with actual return metrics — to find stocks that have outperformed what their beta predicted.
Beta’s Blind Spots
Beta is one of the most useful risk metrics, but it has real limitations you need to understand:
1. Beta is backward-looking
Beta is calculated from historical data. A company that was stable for 5 years can become volatile overnight if its business model changes, a new competitor emerges, or regulation shifts.
Mitigation: Supplement beta with recent price volatility and news. On ScreenerHub, check the stock’s recent performance alongside its beta — a stable beta with sudden price drops is a red flag.
2. Beta doesn’t capture company-specific risk
Beta measures market risk only. A pharmaceutical company waiting for FDA approval might have a low beta but massive idiosyncratic risk. A single binary event (approval or rejection) could move the stock 50% — and beta won’t warn you.
Mitigation: Combine beta with fundamental quality metrics: debt-to-equity, earnings consistency, and revenue stability. These capture risks that beta misses entirely.
3. Beta assumes symmetric risk
A stock with a beta of 1.5 is expected to amplify both gains and losses equally. In reality, some stocks are more sensitive to downside moves than upside — they fall faster than they rise. Beta doesn’t distinguish between upside beta and downside beta.
Mitigation: Look at the stock’s drawdown history alongside its beta. A high-beta stock that recovered quickly from past corrections is different from one that took years to bounce back.
4. Low beta doesn’t mean low risk
Utility stocks typically have low betas — but they carry interest rate risk, regulatory risk, and concentration risk that beta doesn’t measure. A “safe” low-beta utility can still lose 30% if interest rates spike.
Mitigation: Don’t use beta as your only risk measure. Layer in debt-to-equity, payout ratio, and sector-specific metrics. Low beta is a starting point for defense, not the complete picture.
5. Beta changes over time
A stock’s beta isn’t fixed. It shifts as the company evolves, as the market environment changes, and as the calculation window rolls forward. A former growth stock that matures may see its beta decline from 1.5 to 0.9 over several years.
Mitigation: Re-run your beta-based screens periodically. What qualified as a low-beta stock a year ago may not today. Save your screen on ScreenerHub and revisit it monthly.
Beta is one piece of the risk puzzle. Combine it with fundamental analysis for a complete picture.
Beta vs. Other Risk and Volatility Metrics
Beta is the standard measure of market-relative risk, but it’s not the only way to evaluate volatility. Here’s how it compares:
| Metric | Best For |
|---|---|
| Beta | Portfolio construction, risk-adjusted screening |
| Standard Deviation | Assessing absolute price swings |
| Alpha | Evaluating manager/stock performance |
| Sharpe Ratio | Comparing investments on a risk-adjusted basis |
| R-squared (R²) | Validating whether beta is meaningful |
| Maximum Drawdown | Stress-testing worst-case scenarios |
The R-squared check
One critical nuance: beta is only meaningful when R-squared is high. R-squared measures how much of a stock’s price movement is explained by market movements.
- R² > 0.70 — Beta is reliable. The stock mostly moves with the market.
- R² between 0.40 – 0.70 — Beta is partially useful. Other factors drive significant moves.
- R² < 0.40 — Beta is unreliable. The stock marches to its own drum.
A biotech stock might have a beta of 0.8, suggesting it’s defensive. But if its R² is 0.15, that beta is statistically meaningless — the stock’s price is driven by drug trial results, not market direction.
Real-World Beta Profiles
Abstract numbers become concrete with examples. Here are the profiles you’ll encounter when screening:
The defensive anchor (β: 0.45)
A large-cap consumer staples company. It sells household products that people buy regardless of economic conditions — detergent, toothpaste, packaged food. In a 2022-style downturn where the S&P 500 fell ~20%, this stock only declined about 9%.
Ideal for: Retirement portfolios, risk-averse investors, capital preservation during uncertain markets.
Next steps: Add to your watchlist and combine with dividend yield analysis. Low-beta stocks with growing dividends are the backbone of income-focused strategies.
The market tracker (β: 1.02)
A diversified large-cap industrial conglomerate. It moves almost perfectly with the S&P 500 — when the market rallies, it rallies by roughly the same amount. When it falls, same story.
Ideal for: Core portfolio holdings, investors who want market-like returns from individual stocks rather than index funds.
Next steps: Compare this stock’s return to the S&P 500 over 3- and 5-year periods. If it’s consistently matching the index, you’re not getting much alpha for the effort of stock-picking.
The growth amplifier (β: 1.65)
A mid-cap semiconductor company. Its revenue swings with the chip cycle, and the stock amplifies every market move by about 65%. In the 2023 AI-driven rally, this stock surged far beyond the S&P 500.
Ideal for: Aggressive growth portfolios with a long time horizon. Not suitable for money you’ll need within 2–3 years.
Next steps: Check the P/E ratio and earnings growth to make sure you’re not overpaying for the volatility.
The misleading low beta (β: 0.55)
A regional bank stock. The low beta suggests stability — but regional banks are massively exposed to interest rate risk and loan defaults. During the 2023 banking scare, several “low beta” regional banks dropped 40–60% in days.
Lesson: Beta missed the risk because the failure mode (bank run, confidence crisis) wasn’t captured in normal market-correlation data. Always combine beta with fundamental health metrics.
How to Screen for Beta on ScreenerHub
Setting up a beta-based screen takes about 30 seconds:
1. Open the Screener Studio
Go to the Screener Studio. Start with a clean slate or load an existing saved screen.
2. Add the beta filter
Click Add Filter, then search for “Beta” or browse the Risk & Stability category. Select Beta.
3. Set your range
Configure the beta range for your strategy:
- Defensive screen: 0.3 – 0.8
- Core holdings: 0.8 – 1.2
- Growth screen: 1.3 – 2.0
- All stocks (no beta filter): leave unset
4. Layer additional filters
Beta works best in combination. Add 2–3 more criteria:
- Market cap — to filter company size
- Dividend yield — for income-oriented screens
- P/E ratio — to add a valuation layer
- Sector — to compare volatility within an industry
- ROE — to ensure quality earnings generation
5. Review, save, and monitor
Sort results by beta (ascending for low volatility, descending for high). Save promising stocks to a watchlist, or save the entire screen setup to re-run whenever market conditions shift.
Pro tip: A stock’s beta can drift over time. Set up monitoring on your watchlist to track whether key holdings cross your beta threshold. ScreenerHub’s Monitoring Lab catches these shifts automatically — so you can rebalance before the next market dip.
Common Beta Strategies for Portfolio Construction
The barbell approach
Combine ultra-low-beta and high-beta positions, with nothing in the middle. The idea: your low-beta stocks (utilities, staples) protect capital in downturns while your high-beta stocks (tech, biotech) capture outsized gains in rallies.
| Allocation | Beta Range | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 50% portfolio | 0.3 – 0.6 | Capital shield |
| 50% portfolio | 1.5 – 2.0 | Growth engine |
The risk-parity approach
Size every position so it contributes equal risk. A stock with a beta of 2.0 gets half the dollar allocation of a stock with a beta of 1.0.
| Stock | Beta | Target Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Stock A | 0.5 | 40% |
| Stock B | 1.0 | 20% |
| Stock C | 2.0 | 10% |
The rotation approach
Shift your portfolio’s average beta based on market conditions. During bull markets, tilt toward high beta. During recessions or rate hikes, shift to low beta.
- Expansionary market: Target portfolio beta of 1.2 – 1.5
- Late cycle / uncertain: Target portfolio beta of 0.8 – 1.0
- Recessionary / defensive: Target portfolio beta of 0.5 – 0.7
You can use ScreenerHub to build screens for each market regime and save them separately. When conditions change, switch screens and rebuild your watchlist.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good beta for a stock?
It depends on your risk tolerance and investment goals. Conservative investors typically target beta below 1.0 for stability. Growth-focused investors may accept beta above 1.3 to amplify returns. For a diversified portfolio, an overall beta near 1.0 means you’re roughly tracking the market.
Is high beta good or bad?
Neither inherently. High beta (above 1.3) means the stock amplifies market moves — up and down. In a rising market, high-beta stocks outperform. In a falling market, they underperform significantly. High beta is only “good” if you have the risk tolerance and time horizon to withstand the swings.
What does a beta of 0 mean?
A beta of exactly 0 means the stock’s returns have zero correlation with the market. In practice, this is extremely rare for publicly traded stocks. Cash and some fixed-income instruments behave this way, but almost every equity has some market sensitivity.
Can beta be negative?
Yes, but it’s uncommon. A negative beta means the stock tends to move opposite the market — rising when the market falls, and vice versa. Gold mining stocks occasionally exhibit slightly negative beta. Inverse ETFs are designed to have negative beta, but those are funds, not individual stocks.
How often does beta change?
Beta is recalculated continuously as new price data becomes available. For most stocks, beta shifts gradually over months and years — it doesn’t jump overnight. However, major events (an acquisition, a sector rotation, a business model change) can alter a stock’s beta meaningfully over a few quarters.
Should I use beta for short-term trading?
Beta is best suited for medium- to long-term portfolio decisions (months to years). For short-term trading, price action, RSI, and volume are more useful. Beta calculations use monthly data over years — they reflect a stock’s general character, not its day-to-day behavior.
Can I filter by beta on ScreenerHub?
Yes. Beta is available as a filter in the Risk & Stability category on ScreenerHub. You can set exact ranges, combine it with 50+ other criteria, and save your screen. The beta filter is available to all users, including free accounts. Start screening now →
Keep Learning
Beta is essential for understanding risk — but it works best as part of a broader analytical toolkit. Explore these related topics:
- What Is Stock Screening? — Understand the full screening process
- What Is the P/E Ratio? — The most popular valuation metric for stock screening
- What Is RSI? — Add a technical momentum indicator to your toolkit
Risk Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. The information does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. All investment decisions are made at your own responsibility. Investments in securities involve risks and may result in the total loss of invested capital. The information in this article does not replace individual investment advice from qualified professionals.