Evolve Canadian Expected Short fall

UTES Etf   9.63  -0.17  -1.73%   
Historical market data for Evolve Canadian Utilities forms the basis of the Expected Short fall indicator shown here. The indicator computation uses normalized market activity data. Market data gaps can influence the computed indicator values. World Market Map provides context for diversified portfolio design. Additional portfolio transparency improves capital positioning. Diversification analysis considers the interaction of positions within a portfolio. The holding in Evolve Canadian Utilities represents an allocation. This is situated within the portfolio mix. Also, note that the market value of any etf could be closely tied with the direction of predictive economic indicators such as signals in inflation.
Evolve Canadian Utilities has current Expected Short fall of -0.55. Expected shortfall (or ES) is a risk measure that evaluates the market risk of an equity instrument. It is an alternative to value at risk that is more sensitive to the shape of the loss distribution in the tail of the distribution. The expected shortfall at a particular level is the expected return on the portfolio in the worst percent of the cases. Expected shortfall is also called conditional value at risk (CVaR), average value at risk (AVaR), and expected tail loss (ETL).

Expected Shortfall

=

Conditional VAR

 = 
-0.55
VAR =   Value At Risk of Evolve Canadian

Expected Short fall Peers Comparison

Expected Short fall Relative To Other Indicators

Evolve Canadian Utilities is rated below average in expected short fall against similar ETFs. It is currently under evaluation in maximum drawdown against similar ETFs .
ES evaluates the value (or risk) of an investment in a conservative way, focusing on the less profitable outcomes. For high values of it ignores the most profitable but unlikely possibilities, for small values of it focuses on the worst losses. On the other hand, unlike the discounted maximum loss even for lower values of expected shortfall does not consider only the single most catastrophic outcome. Expected shortfall is a coherent, and moreover a spectral, measure of financial portfolio risk. Compare Evolve Canadian to Peers

Other Technical Indicators