Investments  

The rise of passive equity funds in the US

This article is part of
Guide to US Equities

The rise of passive equity funds in the US

The traditional belief in investment management was that active managers was the key way for investors to earn alpha, or excess returns. 

In recent years, underperformance by active managers has seen a rise in passive investing. 

The debate between active or passive is one that is not new, nor too old, but how big are passive equity funds in the US today? 

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Rise of passive funds  

In February 2019, Morningstar reported in its Active/Passive Barometer report that only 38 per cent of active US stock funds survived and out performed their average passive peers in 2018 down from 46 per cent in 2017. 

Alex Sumner portfolio manager at Blackfinch Investments, says: “It is a well-worn adage in the financial industry that active managers struggle to outperform the S&P 500, and the numbers do support this, with S&P Dow Jones reporting that for the ninth consecutive year, more than half of all large cap US active managers have underperformed the index.”

He adds: “However, this is not to say that active managers are all losing the battle and for those investors willing to take the time to look, there are some incredibly successful active managers in the US large cap space.”

Jason Hollands, managing director at Tilney Investment Management, highlights that advisers have often struggled when it comes to allocating into the US market, due to the difficulty faced by active managers when it comes to beating alpha. 

He says this is because the “US market is a notoriously difficult one for active fund managers to beat". 

Exchange traded funds 

Mr Hollands says: ”The good news is that the evolution of the ETF market has providers with many more options for accessing the US market beyond the choice of a traditional tracker fund or trying to find an elusive active fund manager who can consistently outperform."

Mihir Kapadia, chief executive of Sun Global Investments, shares the same view. 

“If a structured core portfolio of passive funds is in place, there is no need to continue spending time or resources on the stock selection or market timing, and can effectively manage uncertainty and position the portfolios accordingly to achieve better growth in the markets over time.” 

He adds: “Thus the investor can use passive funds such as ETFs to get a market exposure and use active fund to get exposure to specific niche strategies which are not available via passive funds.” 

He believes that factor funds can enable investors to achieve exposure to the US in a highly diversified manner, and at low cost, while addressing some of the concerns that are brewing about stretched valuations in parts of the market. 

Mr Hollands lists the following ETF strategies: 

  • Invesco FTSE RAFI 1000 UCITS ETF- which holds the 1,000 largest US listed companies but weights them on a basket of four fundamental factors of revenues, cash flow, dividends and net assets. This strategy results in a more defensive and value aware approach. 
  • SPDR S&P US Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF which owns those companies which have increased their dividends every year for at least 20 consecutive years.

Laith Khalaf, senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, says: “For large cap exposure it’s therefore probably best to seek out a passive solution which tracks the market and reduces costs, such as the Legal and General US Index fund.”