Reference~3 min read

How portfolio scores work

What the A/B/C grade on each portfolio means, how it is calculated, and what it does not tell you.

What the score is

Every model portfolio shows a letter grade: A+, A, B+, B, C, or D. It is a single number that summarises how that portfolio has performed against the S&P 500 across three things: how much it returned, how far it fell in its worst period, and how much market risk it carries. SPY scores around B. That is the baseline.

A portfolio that has meaningfully beaten SPY with similar or smaller drawdowns will score A or A+. One that has roughly matched SPY will score B. One that has lagged or had a worse drawdown than SPY will score C or D.

Three factors, three weights

Three inputs feed the score, each with a fixed weight:

Alpha — 50%

Did the portfolio beat the S&P 500? Beating it by more than 25% over the window earns the full points here. Lagging by more than 15% scores zero. Everything in between is prorated.

Max drawdown — 30%

Did the portfolio fall less than the S&P 500 in its worst period? A significantly smaller drawdown earns the full 30%. A drawdown that is substantially worse than SPY's earns nothing.

Beta — 20%

Does the portfolio carry less market sensitivity than 1.0? A weighted beta below 1.0 earns the full 20%. Above 1.0 loses points. This rewards portfolios that achieve their returns without simply amplifying market exposure.

How the score blends over time

The score blends two time windows: the last 12 months (50%) and the full available history (50%). Blending stops a single lucky or unlucky year from dominating.

If a portfolio is under one year old, only the full-history window is used. The final grade is then dropped by one letter to flag the short track record. A short window is unlikely to have covered more than one or two of the five market environments (growth, inflation, recession, deflation, and choppy/sideways markets), so a high score early on carries less weight. A new portfolio that would otherwise score A will show B+ until it has at least one full year of data.

What the grades mean in practice

A+
Substantially beat SPY with a smaller drawdown. Strong returns and better downside protection across the measured window.
A
Meaningfully beat SPY with a similar or smaller drawdown. The portfolio has earned its complexity over the measured period.
B+
Beat SPY modestly, or matched it with a clearly better drawdown. A step above the index baseline.
B
Roughly matched SPY in both return and drawdown. This is where SPY itself would score.
C
Lagged SPY or had a noticeably worse drawdown. Worth understanding why before investing.
D
Both underperformed SPY and had a worse drawdown over the same period.

What the score does not tell you

The score is backward-looking and uses a single benchmark (SPY). A portfolio with a B might suit your goals better than an A-rated one if the A relies on one specific market environment to shine.

The measured window may only cover one or two of those five environments. A high score in a limited window is not the same as a strategy that holds up across all of them.

Use the score as a starting point, not a conclusion. Read the portfolio description and understand the strategy before making a decision based on the grade alone.

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