Benchmark

A standard index or portfolio against which investment performance is measured.

Portfolio Management

Definition

Benchmarks serve as performance yardsticks and investment policy guides. A good benchmark is investable, unambiguous, measurable, appropriate to the strategy, and specified in advance. Common benchmarks include S&P 500 (large-cap US equity), Bloomberg Aggregate (US bonds), and MSCI EAFE (international developed equity).

lightbulb Example

A US large-cap growth fund uses the Russell 1000 Growth Index as its benchmark. Over 5 years, the fund returns 14.2% vs benchmark 12.8%—the 1.4% annualized outperformance suggests meaningful alpha generation.

verified_user Key Points

  • Must be investable, measurable, and appropriate
  • Specified in advance (not chosen after the fact)
  • S&P 500 is the most common US equity benchmark
  • Benchmark selection affects alpha measurement

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