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RiskGrades going going......

edited April 2011 in Fund Discussions
An announcement at RiskGrades.com says the site will be gone after June 30. It has been a fine resource for years.

Does anyone know of a roughly equivalent site?

Thanks,

Archaic

Comments

  • Bummer, it is a really useful site. You can use standard deviation, sharpe ratio, or treynor ratio.
  • Risk grades simply a normalized volatility measure that gives more weight to more recent price changes. It is rather simple. You can download the technical paper from their web site and input the formula to a spread sheet along with price data from Yahoo/M* and calculate your own risk metrics.
  • edited April 2011
    Speaking of spreadsheets. This guy has some incredibly good spreadsheets and tutorials. His old site is archived here and was virus free as far as I could tell. Gummy is a retired Math prof.

    You can look at the tutorials without downloading sheets..


    http://www.financialwebring.org/gummy-stuff/gummy_stuff.htm



    portfolio
    http://www.financialwebring.org/gummy-stuff/portfolio.htm


    http://www.financialwebring.org/gummy-stuff/fund-you.htm

    http://www.financialwebring.org/gummy-stuff/YTD.htm
  • I like Archaic found out that Riskgrades is going out of business on June 30th. I have used it to try to keep my portfolio at about a risk grade of 40 to 45. I'm 77 in good health but I know my time is coming. I just got through looking at the various spreadsheets posted and I have never been too good at statistics. I seems to me like a lot of work. Yes I do look at beta and standard deviations plus past performances when choosing a mutual fund but I enjoyed plugging in my whole portfolio and theoretical portfolios to seen what the grade would be. I know Fundamentals used Riskgrades in his portfolios. Speaking of Fundamentals, as such a heavy and great poster he either feel seriously ill or died to stop so abruptly. I printed off many of his comments as I always found him very analytical and he seemed to stay above the emotional fray of investing which is so hard to do for many of us. I'm sorrow to lose Riskgrades, and also Fundamentals, any other suggestions? Tom Mitchell
  • Tom,

    I also miss fundamentals, he was one of kind.
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