What percentage of mutual funds are passive?
In 2022, the US market share of passive funds increased by three percentage points, from 42% to 45%. Over ten years, the data shows a significant increase in market share for passively invested funds, from 24% to 45%.
Pratik Oswal, Head of Passive Funds, MOAMC said, “Passive funds are widely popular in the US and have over 50 percent market share. We have started seeing similar trends in India over the last few years as well. With a market share of around 17 percent, we believe that there is ample runway for passive funds ahead.
While passively-managed index funds only constituted 21 percent of the total assets managed by investment companies in the the United States in 2012, this share had increased to 45 percent by 2022.
In general terms, active management refers to mutual funds that are actively managed by a portfolio manager. Passive management typically refers to funds that simply mirror the composition and performance of a specific index, such as the Standard & Poor's 500® Index.
Less than 10% of active large-cap fund managers have outperformed the S&P 500 over the last 15 years. The biggest drag on investment returns is unavoidable, but you can minimize it if you're smart. Here's what to look for when choosing a simple investment that can beat the Wall Street pros.
We estimate that passive investors held at least 37.8% of the US stock market in 2020. This estimate is based on the closing volumes of index additions and deletions on reconstitution days. 37.8% is more than double the widely accepted previous value of 15%, which represents the combined holdings of all index funds.
“BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street are often lumped together for the purpose of considering large passive managers within the U.S.,” Stewart told Institutional Investor. But when it comes to proxy voting on ESG issues, the three managers diverge in their approaches, due to their different client bases.
Mutual funds come in both active and indexed varieties, but most are actively managed.
Most mutual funds are actively managed while most ETFs are passive investments that track a particular index. ETFs can be more tax-efficient than actively managed funds due to lower turnover and fewer capital gains.
In 2022, there were a total of 6,585 actively-managed mutual funds in the U.S. - a slight decrease of 85 from the previous year. There were only 517 passively-managed index mutual funds in the U.S. in 2022.
How do you know if a mutual fund is active or passive?
Active funds generally have higher expense ratios due to the extensive research, analysis, and management activities performed by the fund manager. On the other hand, passive funds have lower expense ratios because the fund manager's role is limited, and the investment strategy is relatively straightforward.
Vanguard is well-known for its pioneering work in creating and marketing index mutual funds and ETFs to investors. Indexing is a passive investment strategy that seeks to replicate, rather than beat, the performance of some benchmark index such as the S&P 500 or Nasdaq 100.

Passive funds allow a particular index to guide which securities are traded, which means there is not the added expense of research analysts. Even passively managed funds will charge fees.
The 80% investment policy requirement also applies to names suggesting that a fund's distributions are tax exempt. The current Names Rule, however, does not apply to fund names that suggest a particular strategy or policy (e.g., growth or value). As amended, the Names Rule aims to fill this perceived gap.
A common misconception is that rich people pick stocks themselves, when in fact, wealthy investors are often putting their cash in index funds, ETFs, and mutual funds, Tu told MarketWatch Picks.
Although it is very difficult, the market can be beaten. Every year, some managers boast better numbers than the market indices. A small fraction even manages to do so over a longer period. Over the horizon of the last 20 years, less than 10% of U.S. actively managed funds have beaten the market.
However, if the stock falls 7% or more below the entry, it triggers the 7% sell rule. It is time to exit the position before it does further damage. That way, investors can still be in the game for future opportunities by preserving capital. The deeper a stock falls, the harder it is to get back to break-even.
We have suggested as a fundamental guiding rule that the investor should never have less than 25% or more than 75% of his funds in common stocks, with a consequent inverse range of between 75% and 25% in bonds.
Active strategies have tended to benefit investors more in certain investing climates, and passive strategies have tended to outperform in others. For example, when the market is volatile or the economy is weakening, active managers may outperform more often than when it is not.
Return (%) | ||
---|---|---|
Portfolio | #ETF | Feb 2024 |
Stocks/Bonds 60/40 Momentum | 2 | 3.23 |
Stocks/Bonds 80/20 | 2 | 2.07 |
Dedalo Three | 2 | 2.57 |
What is the 3 fund rule?
A three-fund portfolio is a way of balancing simplicity with diversification. A three-fund portfolio normally will be split among three asset classes: domestic (U.S.) stocks, international stocks, and domestic bonds. Be mindful that some three-fund portfolios may also incidentally incorporate some alternative assets.
A number of popular authors and columnists have suggested three-fund lazy portfolios. These usually consist of three equal parts of bonds (total bond market or TIPS), total US market and total international market.
Over the full period, just 2% of actively managed Large-Cap Core funds beat the S&P 500. Even in categories such as small- and mid-sized stocks, and growth — which benefited from the tailwinds of an outperforming universe — a minimum of 81% of actively managed funds underperformed the benchmark.
They're run by professional money managers who decide which securities to buy (stocks, bonds, etc.) and when to sell them. You get exposure to all the investments in the fund and any income they generate. They offer a wide variety of investment strategies and styles.
The report first began publication in 2002 and has tracked what percentage of actively managed funds have outperformed the S&P since that time period. As time goes on, the number increasingly drops, and according to the data, only about 10% of actively managed funds have outperformed the S&P 500 over the past 15 years.