Galton’s 130-year-old idea, finally a framework. — AlphaBlock Insights
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// Perspective · May 2015 · 5 min read

Galton’s 130-year-old idea, finally a framework.

Galton defined reversion in 1886 — relative before absolute, convergence balanced by divergence, the same behaviour across domains. This paper is the first to extend that definition into a working framework, tested on stock markets.

Mean Reversion Framework · Mukul Pal · SSRN 2607963

Mean reversion may be the most cited and least specified idea in finance. Galton’s original 1886 work was precise: reversion is relative before absolute — a variable measured against its sample average; convergence exists in balance with divergence; and the behaviour expresses itself across domains, not just in one dataset. For 130 years the idea sat in the open, un-extended.

The paper builds the missing framework and states its requirements plainly: any proxy expressing Galtonian reversion should be simple, relative and universal. On a stock-market case, that becomes relative ranking against the group, a relative average as the attractor, and both forces — convergence and divergence — priced as first-class citizens. Reversion’s famous “failures” stop being anomalies; they are the divergence half of the balance.

The mechanics

EXHIBIT 1 — Reversion measured on a relative rank axis
100th pct 0th pct time → relative average — the attractor convergence divergence — reversion’s balancing force
Source: Pal (2015), SSRN 2607963. Schematic; illustrative.
EXHIBIT 2 — From Galton’s observations to a working framework
Galton, 1886Framework translation
Relative before absoluteRank components against the group — never against a price level
Relation to the sample averageThe relative average is the attractor the system oscillates around
Convergence balanced by divergenceBoth forces are priced; a failed reversion is divergence, not an anomaly
Cross-domain expressionOne proxy — simple, relative, universal — works beyond markets
Source: Pal (2015), SSRN 2607963.

Extremes carry odds

Reversion is not a promise; it is a probability gradient. The further a component sits from its group mean, the better the odds of the journey back — and percentile bands are what make that gradient usable. A stock at the 95th percentile of relative performance is not “due” to fall; it simply carries measurably different odds than one at the 60th.

Bands convert forecasting into bookkeeping. No price targets, no narratives — just positions located relative to their band, each carrying historical transition odds. That is the kind of information a probabilistic engine can compound: small, persistent edges applied across a whole universe, rebalance after rebalance.

EXHIBIT 3 — Odds of moving toward the mean, by starting percentile
82%64%45%44%62%84%5th20th40th60th80th95thodds of reverting toward the mean (illustrative)
Source: Pal (2015), SSRN 2607963. Illustrative.

What it means for portfolios

This is the oldest pillar under the 3N™ engine — the paper that turns a nineteenth-century observation into a construction rule. Weighting by where a constituent sits relative to the group, with divergence expected rather than explained away, is what allows a benchmark to hold reversion candidates the cap-weighted rule quietly discards. If you read one paper in this series first, read this one.

Key takeaways
  • Galtonian reversion is relative: measured against the group’s average, never a price level.
  • Convergence and divergence are one balance — reversion’s “failures” are the other half of the law.
  • A valid reversion proxy is simple, relative, universal — the specification 3N™ builds on.
Reference

Pal, M. (2015). Mean Reversion Framework. SSRN 2607963.

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Important disclosures

This note is provided for information and discussion purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, investment research, a recommendation, or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any security or investment product, and it should not be relied upon for any investment decision. Views are drawn from the referenced paper as of its publication date and are subject to change without notice. Exhibits are illustrative unless otherwise stated and do not depict the performance of any actual portfolio; hypothetical and idealized results have inherent limitations and do not reflect actual trading. Past performance does not guarantee future results. AlphaBlock Technologies Inc. is a financial-technology licensor; regulated products are offered solely by licensed partners in their respective jurisdictions under their own documentation. © 2026 AlphaBlock Technologies Inc.

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