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Active management (also called active investing) is an approach to investing. In an actively managed portfolio of investments, the investor selects the investments that make up the portfolio. Active management is often compared to passive management or index investing.
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Active investors aim to generate additional returns by buying and selling investments advantageously. They look for investments where the market price differs from the underlying value and will buy investments when the market price is too low and sell investments when the market price is too high.[1]
Active investors use various techniques to identify mispriced investments. Two common techniques are:
Active management may be used in all aspects of investing. It can be used for:
Active investors have many goals. Many active investors are seeking a higher return. Other goals of active management can be managing risk, minimizing taxes, increasing dividend or interest income, or achieving non-financial goals, such as advancing social or environmental causes.[3]
Active investors seek to profit from market inefficiencies by purchasing investments that are undervalued or by selling securities that are overvalued.
Therefore, active investors do not agree with the strong and semi-strong forms of the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH). In the stronger forms of the EMH, all public information has been incorporated into stock prices, which makes it impossible to outperform.
Active management is consistent with the weak form of the EMH, which argues that prices reflect all information related to price changes in the past. Under the weak form the EMH, fundamental analysis can be profitable, though technical analysis cannot be profitable.[4]
There are two well-known theories that the balance between active management and passive management:
With regard to empirical support for both theories, a 2021 paper finds that "the research findings seem to accord more with a Grossman and Stiglitz equilibrium than Sharpe's proposition." The paper also notes that "the underlying logic [of Sharpe's proposition] is not as water-tight as it may seem."[7]
Many writers on finance argue that actively managed funds consistently underperform, and, as a result, they recommend investing in index funds.[8][9] This negative assessment is controversial and has been challenged.[10]
There are two reports that regularly evaluate the performance of actively managed funds. The first is the SPIVA report (Standard & Poors Index Versus Active), which compares actively managed funds to an index.[11] The second is the Morningstar Active-Passive Barometer, which compares actively managed funds to passively managed funds.[12] Both reports are published semi-annually and use a similar approach, namely:
These reports have often concluded that the performance of actively-managed funds is disappointing. For example, the SPIVA U.S. Year-End 2021 report finds that "79.6% of domestic equity funds lagged the S&P Composite 1500 in 2021."[13] Results vary by category, with some categories experiencing a higher percentage of outperformance.
One analysis of the methodology in these reports concludes that it results in an overly negative assessment of active managers' skill, especially over longer periods.[14]
SPIVA publishes two additional reports comparing the performance of actively managed funds to a passive benchmark: a risk-adjusted performance analysis[15] and a performance "persistence" analysis. The persistence analysis calculates the percentage of actively managed funds that have outperformed a passive benchmark in consecutive periods.[16]
The persistence report is controversial. One critic has called persistence "overrated" and a "red herring".[17]
Many academic studies have concluded that actively managed US equity funds underperform after fees. Well known studies include Jensen (1968),[18] Malkiel (1995),[19] Elton, Gruber, and Blake (1996),[20] and Fama and French (2010).[21] However, Berk and van Binsbergen (2015) find that dollar-weighted returns are consistent with the Grossman-Stiglitz equilibrium.[22]
Active management provides investors with the potential to earn higher returns. Active investors can have expertise that enables them to select investments that do better than the market as a whole.
Active management is more flexible than passive management. This flexibility has multiple benefits for investors:
The most obvious disadvantage of active management is that investment returns may be lower rather than higher.
In addition, active management is generally more expensive than passive management. The higher costs are a result of the resources needed to evaluate investments and determine whether they should be bought or sold.
Finally, active management is often less tax-efficient than passive management, because it may buy and sell investments more frequently and generate capital gains as a result.[24][25] However, active managers can be tax-efficient.[26]
Active management is the most common investment approach. For example, at the end of 2020, $14.8 trillion of U.S. mutual fund assets were actively managed, while only $4.8 trillion were passively managed.[27]
However, active management does not dominate in every category. For example, at the end of 2020, only $0.2 trillion of the $5.3 trillion in assets in 1940 Act exchange-traded funds were actively managed.[27]
Active management plays an important role in maintaining market efficiency. Through the buying and selling of investments, active managers establish the market prices for securities. Therefore, an increase in the amount of active management will lead to greater market efficiency.[28] Market efficiency is beneficial because it encourages broad investor participation in the market, it makes it easier for investors to diversity risk, and it encourages capital formation.[29]
Active management also plays an important role in capital formation, because actively-managed portfolios are the buyers of initial public offerings of securities.[29]
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