You’re a victim of the sloppy language of people in finance.
First, when you talk about correlation, you need to be specific about what characteristics are correlated. Do not ever –
ever! – say, “the correlation of two stocks.”
Ever!
If you mean the correlation of the stocks’ prices, then say
the correlation of stocks’ prices. If you mean the correlation of the stocks’ returns, then say
the correlation of the stocks’ returns.
(Similarly, do not say “the standard deviation of the portfolio.” If you mean the standard deviation of the portfolio’s prices, then say
the standard deviation of the portfolio’s prices. If you mean the standard deviation of the portfolio’s returns, then say
the standard deviation of the portfolio’s returns.)
Second, remember that correlation measures how two quantities move
about their respective means, not
about zero. If you have perfect, positive correlation, the quantities are above their respective means together, and below their respective means together. If you have perfect, negative correlation, one quantity is above its mean when the other is below its mean, and vice-versa.
Third, remember that in portfolio management, we’re talking about the correlation of
returns, and the standard deviation of
returns, not the correlation and standard deviation of
prices. These are very, very different ideas. Two stocks can have perfect, positive correlation of returns and:
- Perfect, positive correlation of prices,
- Zero correlation of prices, or
- Nearly perfect, negative correlation of prices
It all depends on what the respective
mean returns are.
Try an experiment in Excel. Start with two stocks – A and B – priced at $100/share. For 20 periods, let the periodic returns be:
- A: +2%, 0%, +2%, 0%, … ; B: +2%, 0%, +2%, −0%, …
- A: +2%, 0%, +2%, 0%, … ; B: +1%, −1%, +1%, −1%, …
- A: +2%, 0%, +2%, 0%, … ; B: 0%, −2%, 0%, −2%, …
In all three cases, the correlation of returns is +1.0. Take a look at the prices.