Blending active and passive strategies | John Hanco*ck Investment Mgmt (2024)

The debate over whether investors should choose an active or passive approach is ultimately misguided, because they can benefit greatly by combining both approaches in the same portfolio.

Blending active and passive strategies | John Hanco*ck Investment Mgmt (1)

Key takeaways

  • Index investing has produced numerous benefits for investors—and for the asset management industry at large.
  • Many of the shortcomings in capitalization-weighted index strategies can be addressed with newer, strategic beta approaches.
  • Research suggests that many high active share strategies have outperformed over time, even after fees are taken into account.
  • Given investor needs and market complexity, the role of active strategies extends beyond beta to include objectives such as portfolio stability, deeper diversification, and niche alpha.
  • Blending active and passive strategies can help investors outperform and pursue other important objectives while still being mindful of cost and tax efficiency.

The debate over whether investors should use active or passive strategies in their portfolios has traditionally been viewed through the lens of outperforming a narrow set of benchmarks. While performance is important, we believe this approach is ultimately not in the best interests of investors. At John Hanco*ck Investment Management, we employ both active and passive approaches in our asset allocation portfolios because we believe each provides significant value to our shareholders. In this post, we explore the advantages and drawbacks of each and seek to provide guidance on how investors can be well served by blending the two in a portfolio.

Index investing has produced multiple benefits for investors

The growth of index-tracking funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) has forever altered the investment landscape for millions of Americans. From a mere 81 funds with a combined $66 billion in assets in 2000, ETFs have grown to represent roughly $3.9 trillion in assets invested across more than 2,000 funds on behalf of nearly six million U.S. households. At the same time, the share of equity mutual fund assets represented1by index funds has more than doubled, to nearly 25.3%.2

The use of these passive strategies has been most pronounced in market segments such as large-capitalization U.S. stocks, where market efficiency and the abundance of information about those stocks make outperforming a given benchmark more challenging. This makes perfect sense, and investors have voted with their dollars—so much so that, as of February 2018, the percentage of U.S. large-cap equity assets, mutual funds, and ETFs invested passively was 49%.2However, the index-tracking, passive investing revolution has done more for investors than merely provide inexpensive market exposure—or beta—to U.S. large-cap stocks.

Lowered fund expenses for all funds

One of the unexpected benefits of index investing is the effect it's had on expenses across all funds. As index funds and ETFs have attracted a growing share of investor dollars since 2000, expenses paid by investors in all equity mutual funds havedropped by nearly 36%. This is due in part to investors flocking to lower-cost options; however, competition from passive strategies has also pressured providers to lower costs of actively managed funds, which fell, on average, from 106 to 82 basis points between 2000 and 2016.2

Raised the performance bar for active managers

The rising popularity of passive strategies, along with the steady drumbeat of financial news coverage on the percentage of U.S. large-cap funds that underperform their benchmarks, has sent a clear message to active managers: Earn your fees, or else. As with the beneficial effect of fee competition, the focus on performance relative to passive strategies can only be good for investors, ensuring they get the value they expect for the fees they pay.

Refocused attention on investor outcomes

Apart from helping to lower fees and raise the bar on fund performance, competition that active strategies face from index funds and ETFs has refocused attention on investor outcomes, such as tax efficiency. Consider portfolio turnover, which creates higher expenses through trading costs. The asset-weighted average turnover rate among mutual funds has dropped to 34%, well below the average of the past 33 years.1

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Not all index-based approaches are the same

All passive strategies involve some active decision in their initial construction. While passive approaches have clearly benefited investors through lower costs and improved tax efficiency, it’s important to recognize some of the more common shortcomings of indexes and ETFs.

Most passive approaches are capitalization weighted

Whether the proxy is the S&P 500 Index, the Russell 3000 Index, or the Wilshire 5000 Index, the composition of most indexes is proportional to the capitalization size of their component companies, so bigger companies get a proportionately bigger weighting in the index. One flaw in this approach is that, by definition, the largest-capitalization stocks have already experienced the greatest amount of price appreciation. The proportionate weighting of these stocks in most indexes is the equivalent of thinking that past performance will predict future results. For example, Apple is one of the largest holdings in all three of the indexes mentioned. Investors in these strategies who believe Apple’s best days are behind it have no choice but to own it as one of their largest holdings. Conversely, capitalization-weighted indexes relegate the smallest—often younger, faster-growing—companies to proportionately smaller weightings.

Membership rotation and index distortion create unintended consequences

The composition ofan index changesfrequently, based on the index’s guidelines and the changing dynamics of the markets.Index providers typically announce changes tocompositionin advance of implementation—for example, announcing on the fifteenth of the month additions and deletions that will go into effect on the first of the following month. Index funds can’t make any changes to their portfolios until the index is officially changed, but other investors often buy the new additions and sell the deletions right away to take advantage of the anticipated change in price. Thisfront runningcreates an unavoidable performance drag for passive strategies as additions are bid up prior to inclusion and deletions begin to sell off before formally exiting the index.3

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Index distortion can take place when external forces have an outsize effect on a group of securities. The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Agg) is a good example. To be eligible for inclusion in the index, a bond must meet certain credit quality, maturity, and size requirements; issues that clear these hurdles are automatically included in the index. Before the credit crisis began in 2007, less than 40% of the index was made up of U.S. Treasuries and government-backed securities. Today, mortgage giants Fannie Mae andFreddieMac remain in the conservatorship of the federal government. While this isrelativelynew territory and it remains to be seen what would happen in the event of a default, we believe the two government-sponsored enterprises are likely supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. That would mean that more than 75% of the Agg is supported by the federal government.4Passive strategies designed to track this widely used and supposedly diversified benchmark are far less diversified as a result.

Strategic beta strategies seek to address some of these issues

Strategic beta, or smart beta, strategies seek to combine the low-cost appeal of index investing with a selection, weighting, and rebalancing strategy that differs from traditional capitalization-weighted indexes. One common example is equal weighting the S&P 500 Index to give more weight to the smaller, undervalued names at the expense of the larger names that have already experienced significant appreciation. In doing so, the equal-weighted version seeks to eliminate the past performance bias inherent in capitalization-weighted indexes. While the variety and popularity of strategic beta funds have grown in recent years, all are defined by transparent methodologies that eliminate the need for ongoing research and portfolio management.

Many active managers outperform, even in efficient markets

The traditional argument against active management has been made using U.S. large-cap equity funds with the assertion that, on average, these managers fail to beat their benchmark indexes in any given year. While this is often true, it’s a mistake to conclude that all active managers underperform. A growing body of research has begun to segment the universe of U.S. large-cap funds in order to demonstrate that, in fact, many active managers outperform their benchmarks over long periods of time, even in a market as efficient as that of U.S. equities, where companies are widely researched and information is readily available. One recurring measure that stands out as a characteristic of successful managers is high active share.

Active share as an indicator of performance potential

Active share measures how different a fund is from the benchmark it’s measured against. It’s calculated by adding the absolute value of a portfolio’s overweights and underweights relative to its benchmark and then dividing by 2. Assume a benchmark owns only one stock. If a manager invests 50% of a portfolio in that stock and 50% in another stock, the fund’s active share is 50%.

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Active share ranges from 0%, in the case of an index, to 100%, where a fund has no holdings in common with its benchmark, with 60% a commonly cited dividing line between highly active and less active funds. A 2015 study by Invesco examined the performance of roughly 3,000 equity mutual funds over five market cycles that took place during the past 20 years and found that high active share funds (>60%) outperformed their benchmarks after fees, on average, in three of the five market cycles.5Active share is only one indicator of performance potential, and it isn’t without its critics; however, it’s clear that a fund must be different from its benchmark in order to outperform it.

Outperformance over time doesn't require outperformance every year

The Invesco study and others suggest that active management may thrive in certain market conditions—those that include higher volatility, for example. As a result, the yearly reporting cycle of relative performance can fail to capture the value of active strategies designed to deliver performance over a full market cycle. For example, some managers employ disciplined strategies that involve seeking to protect assets in declining markets while keeping pace in rising markets. The full benefit of such an approach can't be appreciated by looking only at periods when markets are strongly positive; rather, it becomes more apparent when viewing a combination of weak and strong markets.

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Many markets provide opportunities for active managers to add value

The benchmark against which active managers are often measured—the S&P 500 Index—is an anomaly when viewed on the global stage: It includes a relatively small number of large, highly liquid companies about which information is readily available. In contrast, most areas of the global investment universe are considerably more complex, include illiquid securities, and aren't widely covered by Wall Street analysts. As a result, most markets are less efficient than large U.S. stocks, have a wider dispersion of returns, and represent areas in which research and active management can provide alpha.

Down markets

Large-cap U.S. stocks have experienced losses in 22 of the past 90 years; intrayear market pullbacks are even more common.6Market corrections are often characterized by emotional selling in which correlations increase and prices of high-quality stocks decline alongside those of low-quality stocks. Active managers have the ability to raise cash levels during these periods and sidestep some of the declining stocks. In fact, over the past 35 years, the percentage of active managers who historically outperform their benchmarks has spiked during market declines.7

Small-capitalization stocks

More than 15,000 small- and micro-cap stocks trade in the United States alone on various exchanges and in the over-the-counter market. Yet the entire capitalization of the Russell 2000Index of small company stocks represents just 9% of the U.S. equity market’s total capitalization. This compares with the S&P 500 Index, which represents 80% of U.S. equity market capitalization.8Given the sheer scope of the universe and the small size of its many constituents, the majority of small companies isn't widely covered by Wall Street research, and the dispersion of returns is significantly wider than that of the S&P 500 Index, providingopportunityfor active managers.

International equities

The breadth of opportunities and the dispersion of returns are even greater outside the United States. In fact, researchers at the Rotterdam School of Management, working with Robeco Investment Management, found that performance persistence among active managers is strongly correlated with marketbreadth and that global equities and emerging-market equitiesin particularpossessed the greatest degree of market breadth.9

Fixed income

Outside of government sectors, fixed-income markets possess a number of characteristics that make them unsuitable for indexing, including illiquidity and a lack of reasonable bid/ask spreads. Varying market liquidity and a diversity of market participants driven by non-total-return motive (e.g., liability hedging, capital requirements, tax status) give an astute active manager an opportunity to add value over passive indexes.

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Blending active and passive approaches offers the best of both worlds

The debate over whether investors should choose an active or passive approach is ultimately misguided because they can benefit greatly by combining both approaches in the same portfolio. For more than 25 years, our experience constructing and overseeing multi-asset portfolios has provided us with ample evidence of how complementary these two approaches can be. Passive strategies can achieve market exposure cheaply and efficiently in certain markets. Active strategies can extend the reach of that portfolio and add risk mitigation or performance alpha, depending on the investor’s goals. While high active share strategies have demonstrated their ability to outperform over time, beating a benchmark is too narrow a lens through which to view a well-rounded portfolio.

Passive: gain low-cost exposure to certain markets

For investors looking to accumulate wealth, index-based passive strategies can offer low-cost exposure to markets in whichactivestrategies have historically had a more difficult time outperforming; this is particularly true of U.S. large-cap equities. The weighting of index strategies in a portfolio is a necessary function of investor need and suitability, but may be influenced by the degree to which the investor wishes to reduce expenses and increase tax efficiency. Strategic beta approaches may improve this dynamic further by focusing on proven factors that drive stock returns and by reducing the market capitalization bias of traditional indexes.

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Active: pursue objectives beyond pure market beta

Portfolio stability

One of the outcomes of the 2007/2008 financial crisis was a desire for portfolio-stabilizing strategies that would provide a buffer against volatility while also earning more than cash. As a result, many investors began incorporating absolute return strategies into their portfolios. Employed for several decades in the hedge fund world, absolute return strategies put aside the traditional benchmark-centric approach and instead seek to deliver positive returns across all market environments with significantly less volatility than equities. Some varieties target specific levels of absolute return, but all employ a wide range of portfolio tools, such as raising cash and short selling, to pursue their objectives.

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Deeper diversification

A related outcome of the crisis was the realization that traditional asset classes can become highly correlated in the midst of a severe market event. Alternative strategies have proliferated in the intervening years, providing investors with a wide variety of noncorrelated investment approaches, including currency, market neutral strategies, and real assets. When employed alongside traditional asset classes, alternatives have the potential to deepen the level of portfolio diversification while also pursuing market-like returns.

Niche alpha

While risk mitigation was the driving force of product innovation after the 2007/2008 financial crisis, a number of opportunistic strategies also had their origin in that time period. In fixed income, for example, the dramatic decline in risk-free rates of return spurred the development of strategies that pursued additional drivers of return, including mortgages, emerging-market debt, and high yield.

Conclusion

We believe investors can benefit from blending both active and passive strategies in portfolios. For example, index-based passive strategies can be used to provide beta in more efficient markets, although not all index-based strategies are the same. Meanwhile, active strategies can provide portfolio stability, deeper diversification, and niche alpha.

Learn more aboutmultifactor ETF investinghere.

12018 Investment Company Fact Book, Investment Company Institute, 2018.2Strategic Insight, as of February 2019.3“The index premium and its hidden cost for index funds,”Journal of Empirical Finance, October 2010.4Barclays, 2015.5Think Active Can’t Outperform, Think Again, Invesco, 2015.6Ibbotson SBBI Classic Yearbook 2014: Market Results for Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation 1926–2014, Morningstar, 2015.7“Active Versus Passive Investment Management: Analysis Update,” Arnerich Massena & Associates, Inc., August 2010.8Standard & Poor's, as of 3/31/18.9“Mutual Fund Performance Persistence, Market Efficiency, and Breadth,” papersssrn.com, 2012.10John Hanco*ck Investment Management, Morningstar, 2016.

The S&P 500 Index tracks the performance of 500 of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States. The Russell 3000 Index tracks the performance of 3,000 publicly traded large-, mid-, and small-cap companies in the United States. The Wilshire 5000 Index is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the market value of all stocks actively traded in the United States. The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index tracks the performance of U.S. investment-grade bonds in government, asset-backed, and corporate debt markets. The Russell 2000 Index tracks the performance of 2,000 publicly traded small-cap companies in the United States. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that comprises a portfolio of all 500 stocks in the S&P 500 Index, predominantly consisting of large-cap U.S. stocks. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Alpha measures the difference between an actively managed fund’s return and that of its benchmark index. An alpha of 3, for example, indicates the fund’s performance was 3% better than that of its benchmark (or expected return) over a specified period of time. Beta measures the sensitivity of a fund to its benchmark. The beta of the market (as represented by a benchmark) is 1.00. Accordingly, a fund with a 1.10 beta is expected to have 10% more volatility than the market. Standard deviation is a statistical measure of the historic volatility of a portfolio. It measures the fluctuation of a fund’s periodic returns from the mean or average. The larger the deviation, the larger the standard deviation and the higher the risk. Information ratio is a measure of portfolio management’s performance against risk and return relative to the benchmark. Tracking error is reported as a standard deviation percentage difference—the difference between the return received on an investment and that of the investment’s benchmark. Sharpe ratio is a measure of excess return per unit of risk, as defined by standard deviation. A higher Sharpe ratio suggests better risk-adjusted performance.

Diversification does not guarantee a profit or eliminate the risk of a loss.

Investing involves risks, including the potential loss of principal. The stock prices of midsize and small companies can change more frequently and dramatically than those of large companies. Growth stocks may be more susceptible to earnings disappointments, and value stocks may decline in price. Large company stocks could fall out of favor, and foreign investing, especially in emerging markets, has additional risks, such as currency and market volatility and political and social instability. Absolute return strategies are not designed to outperform stocks and bonds in strong markets, and there is no guarantee of a positive return. Fixed-income investments are subject to interest-rate and credit risk; their value will normally decline as interest rates rise or if an issuer is unable or unwilling to make principal or interest payments. Liquidity—the extent to which a security may be sold or a derivative position closed without negatively affecting its market value, if at all—may be impaired by reduced trading volume, heightened volatility, rising interest rates, and other market conditions. Investments in higher-yielding, lower-rated securities include a higher risk of default. Precious metal and commodity investments can be volatile and are affected by speculation, supply-and-demand dynamics, geopolitical stability, and other factors.

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Blending active and passive strategies | John Hanco*ck Investment Mgmt (2024)

FAQs

What are the active and passive strategies of portfolio management? ›

Active management requires frequent buying and selling in an effort to outperform a specific benchmark or index. Passive management replicates a specific benchmark or index in order to match its performance. Active management portfolios strive for superior returns but take greater risks and entail larger fees.

What are the passive strategies and active strategies? ›

Passive design strategies use ambient energy sources instead of purchased energy like electricity or natural gas. These strategies include daylighting, natural ventilation, and solar energy. Active design strategies use purchased energy to keep the building comfortable.

What is active and passive investment approach? ›

In simple terms, active investors attempt to outperform the returns of a specific benchmark, whereas passive investors accept the market return by tracking a specific index.

What are 2 types of passive investment management strategies? ›

What Is Passive Investing?
  • Mutual funds: When you buy into one of these funds, you're investing in a company that will buy and sell stocks, bonds and more in your name. ...
  • Exchange-traded funds: While similar to mutual funds in many ways, ETFs are traded on an exchange like a stock.
Jan 6, 2023

What is the difference between active and passive portfolio revision strategy? ›

Active Revision Strategy helps a portfolio manager to sell and purchase securities on a regular basis for portfolio revision. Passive Revision Strategy involves rare changes in portfolio only under certain predetermined rules. These predefined rules are known as formula plans.

What are the two main types of portfolio management strategies? ›

Unlike active management, passive portfolio management is a low-cost, hands-off strategy that does not involve regular buying and selling of securities. Rather than outperform a specific index or the market as a whole, passive investments simply look to mirror the returns of a particular index.

What is an example of an active investment strategy? ›

Active managers can buy stocks that may be undervalued and underappreciated in the general market. They can quickly divest themselves of underperforming stocks when the risks become too high. They can choose not to invest during certain periods and wait for good opportunities to buy.

What are active investment strategies? ›

Active investing means investing in funds whose portfolio managers select investments based on an independent assessment of their worth—essentially, trying to choose the most attractive investments. Generally speaking, the goal of active managers is to “beat the market,” or outperform certain standard benchmarks.

What is passive management strategy? ›

Key Takeaways

Passive management is a reference to index funds and exchange-traded funds that mirror an established index, such as the S&P 500. Passive management is the opposite of active management, in which a manager selects stocks and other securities to include in a portfolio.

What is an example of passive portfolio management? ›

Passive portfolio management is a strategy used by index funds. In these types of funds, the mutual fund company buys and sells stocks to match or approximate a market index or benchmark. For example, one mutual fund portfolio might attempt to mirror the S&P 500 stock market index.

Are ETFs active or passive? ›

As the ETF market has evolved, different types of ETFs have been developed. They can be passively managed or actively managed. Passively managed ETFs attempt to closely track a benchmark (such as a broad stock market index, like the S&P 500), whereas actively managed ETFs intend to outperform a benchmark.

Who are the best passive fund managers? ›

Passive management winners, iShares attracted the most net inflows, followed by Vanguard and Amundi
NameNet Assets (EUR Bil) April 20211 year
iShares52370,822
Vanguard22618,719
Amundi9315,994
3 more rows
May 26, 2021

Is BlackRock passive? ›

Morningstar notes that 85% of BlackRock's ESG fund products are now in passive strategies.

What are passive strategies in portfolio management? ›

The goal of passive investing is to build wealth gradually. Also known as a buy-and-hold strategy, passive investing means purchasing a security to own it long-term. Unlike active traders, passive investors do not seek to profit from short-term price fluctuations or market timing.

What are active portfolio strategies? ›

Active portfolio strategy. A strategy that uses available information and forecasting techniques to seek better performance than a buy and hold portfolio.

What is passive portfolio strategy? ›

Financial Terms By: p. Passive portfolio strategy. A strategy that involves minimal expectational input, and instead relies on diversification to match the performance of some market index.

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