Passive Equity Investing (2024)

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2024 Curriculum CFA Program Level III Portfolio Management and Wealth Planning

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Introduction

This reading provides a broad overview of passive equity investing, including indexselection, portfolio management techniques, and the analysis of investment results.

Although they mean different things, passive equity investing and indexing have becomenearly synonymous in the investment industry. Indexing refers to strategies intendedto replicate the performance of benchmark indexes, such as the S&P 500 Index, theTopix 100, the FTSE 100, and the MSCI All-Country World Index. The main advantagesof indexing include low costs, broad diversification, and tax efficiency. Indexingis the purest form of a more general idea: passive investing. Passive investing refersto any rules-based, transparent, and investable strategy that does not involve identifyingmispriced individual securities. Unlike indexing, however, passive investing can includeinvesting in a changing set of market segments that are selected by the portfoliomanager.

Studies over the years have reported support for passive investing. Renshaw and Feldstein (1960) observe that the returns of professionally managed portfolios trailed the returnson the principal index of that time, the Dow Jones Industrial Average. They also concludethat the index would be a good basis for what they termed an “unmanaged investmentcompany.” French (2008) indicates that the cost of passive investing is lower than the cost of active management.

Further motivation for passive investing comes from studies that examine the returnand risk consequences of stock selection, which involves identifying mispriced securities.This differs from asset allocation, which involves selecting asset class investmentsthat are, themselves, essentially passive indexed-based portfolios. Brinson, Hood, and Beebower (1986) find a dominant role for asset allocation rather than security selection in explainingreturn variability. With passive investing, portfolio managers eschew the idea ofsecurity selection, concluding that the benefits do not justify the costs.

The efficient market hypothesis gave credence to investors’ interest in indexes bytheorizing that stock prices incorporate all relevant information—implying that aftercosts, the majority of active investors could not consistently outperform the market.With this backdrop, investment managers began to offer strategies to replicate thereturns of stock market indexes as early as 1971.

In comparison with passive investing strategies, active management of an investmentportfolio requires a substantial commitment of personnel, technological resources,and time spent on analysis and management that can involve significant costs. Consequently,passive portfolio fees charged to investors are generally much lower than fees chargedby their active managers. This fee differential represents the most significant andenduring advantage of passive management.

Another advantage is that passive managers seeking to track an index can generallyachieve their objective. Passive managers model their clients’ portfolios to the benchmark’sconstituent securities and weights as reported by the index provider, thereby replicatingthe benchmark. The skill of a passive manager is apparent in the ability to trade,report, and explain the performance of a client’s portfolio. Gross-of-fees performanceamong passive managers tends to be similar, so much of the industry views passivemanagers as undifferentiated apart from their scope of offerings and client-servicingcapabilities.

Investors of passively managed funds may seek market return, otherwise known as betaexposure, and do not seek outperformance, known as alpha. A focus on beta is basedon a single-factor model: the capital asset pricing model.

Since the turn of the millennium, passive factor-based strategies, which are basedon more than a single factor, have become more prevalent as investors gain a differentunderstanding of what drives investment returns. These strategies maintain the low-costadvantage of index funds and provide a different expected return stream based on exposureto such factors as style, capitalization, volatility, and quality.

This reading contains the following sections. Section 2 focuses on how to choose apassive benchmark, including weighting considerations. Section 3 looks at how to gainexposure to the desired index, whether through a pooled investment, a derivatives-basedapproach, or a separately managed account. Section 4 describes passive portfolio constructiontechniques. Section 5 discusses how a portfolio manager can control tracking erroragainst the benchmark, including the sources of tracking error. Section 6 introducesmethods a portfolio manager can use to attribute the sources of return in the portfolio,including country returns, currency returns, sector returns, and security returns.This section also describes sources of portfolio risk. A summary of key points concludesthe reading.

Learning Outcomes

The member should be able to:

  1. discuss considerations in choosing a benchmark for a passively managed equity portfolio;

  2. compare passive factor-based strategies to market-capitalization-weighted indexing;

  3. compare different approaches to passive equity investing;

  4. compare the full replication, stratified sampling, and optimization approaches for the construction of passively managed equity portfolios;

  5. discuss potential causes of tracking error and methods to control tracking error for passively managed equity portfolios;

  6. explain sources of return and risk to a passively managed equity portfolio.

Summary

This reading explains the rationale for passive investing as well as the construction of equity market indexes and the various methods by which investors can track the indexes. Passive portfolio managers must understand benchmark index construction and the advantages and disadvantages of the various methods used to track index performance.

Among the key points made in this reading are the following:

  • Active equity portfolio managers who focus on individual security selection have long been unsuccessful at beating benchmarks and have charged high management fees to their end investors. Consequently, passive investing has increased in popularity.

  • Passive equity investors seek to track the return of benchmark indexes and construct their portfolios to reflect the characteristics of the chosen benchmarks.

  • Selection of a benchmark is driven by the equity investor’s objectives and constraints as presented in the investment policy statement. The benchmark index must be rules-based, transparent, and investable. Specific important characteristics include the domestic or foreign market covered, the market capitalization of the constituent stocks, where the index falls in the value–growth spectrum, and other risk factors.

  • The equity benchmark index weighting scheme is another important consideration for investors. Weighting methods include market-cap weighting, price weighting, equal weighting, and fundamental weighting. Market cap-weighting has several advantages, including the fact that weights adjust automatically.

  • Index rebalancing and reconstitution policies are important features. Rebalancing involves adjusting the portfolio’s constituent weights after price changes, mergers, or other corporate events have caused those weights to deviate from the benchmark index. Reconstitution involves deleting names that are no longer in the index and adding names that have been approved as new index members.

  • Increasingly, passive investors use index-based strategies to gain exposure to individual risk factors. Examples of known equity risk factors include Capitalization, Style, Yield, Momentum, Volatility, and Quality.

  • For passive investors, portfolio tracking error is the standard deviation of the portfolio return net of the benchmark return.

  • Indexing involves the goal of minimizing tracking error subject to realistic portfolio constraints.

  • Methods of pursuing passive investing include the use of such pooled investments as mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), a do-it-yourself approach of building the portfolio stock-by-stock, and using derivatives to obtain exposure.

  • Conventional open-end index mutual funds generally maintain low fees. Their expense ratios are slightly higher than for ETFs, but a brokerage fee is usually required for investor purchases and sales of ETF shares.

  • Index exposure can also be obtained through the use of derivatives, such as futures and swaps.

  • Building a passive portfolio by full replication, meaning to hold all the index constituents, requires a large-scale portfolio and high-quality information about the constituent characteristics. Most equity index portfolios are managed using either a full replication strategy to keep tracking error low, are sampled to keep trading costs low, or use optimization techniques to match as closely as possible the characteristics and performance of the underlying index.

  • The principal sources of passive portfolio tracking error are fees, trading costs, and cash drag. Cash drag refers to the dilution of the return on the equity assets because of cash held. Cash drag can be exacerbated by the receipt of dividends from constituent stocks and the delay in getting them converted into shares.

  • Portfolio managers control tracking error by minimizing trading costs, netting investor cash inflows and redemptions, and using equitization tools like derivatives to compensate for cash drag.

  • Many index fund managers offer the constituent securities held in their portfolios for lending to short sellers and other market participants. The income earned from lending those securities helps offset portfolio management costs, often resulting in lower net fees to investors.

  • Investor activism is engagement with portfolio companies and recognizing the primacy of end investors. Forms of activism can include expressing views to company boards or management on executive compensation, operational risk, board governance, and other value-relevant matters.

  • Successful passive equity investment requires an understanding of the investor’s needs, benchmark index construction, and methods available to track the index.

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Passive Equity Investing (2024)

FAQs

What is the argument for passive investing? ›

Because active investing is generally more expensive (you need to pay research analysts and portfolio managers, as well as additional costs due to more frequent trading), many active managers fail to beat the index after accounting for expenses—consequently, passive investing has often outperformed active because of ...

What is a passive equity investment? ›

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 the disadvantages of passive investing? ›

The downside of passive investing is there is no intention to outperform the market. The fund's performance should match the index, whether it rises or falls.

What are the problems with passive investing? ›

Once that decision has been made, there may be reasons for adopting passive investment approaches, but investors should realise that they may face unforeseen risks. These include undesirable concentrations of stocks, systemic risk and buying at too high valuations.

What are the 5 advantages of passive investing? ›

Advantages of Passive Investing
  • Steady Earning. Investing in Passive Funds means you're in it for a long race. ...
  • Fewer Efforts. As one of the most known benefits of passive investing, low maintenance is something that active investing surely lacks. ...
  • Affordable. ...
  • Lower Risk. ...
  • Saving on Capital Gain Tax.
Sep 29, 2022

What are the pros and cons of passive investing? ›

The Pros and Cons of Active and Passive Investments
  • Pros of Passive Investments. •Likely to perform close to index. •Generally lower fees. ...
  • Cons of Passive Investments. •Unlikely to outperform index. ...
  • Pros of Active Investments. •Opportunity to outperform index. ...
  • Cons of Active Investments. •Potential to underperform index.

Why is passive investing becoming more popular? ›

Among the benefits of passive investing, say Geczy and others: Very low fees – since there is no need to analyze securities in the index. Good transparency – because investors know at all times what stocks or bonds an indexed investment contains.

What is an example of a passive investment portfolio? ›

Passive portfolios typically include a few different types of investments. Principal among these are index funds, mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Rather than select single securities like stocks or bonds, these funds seek to diversify across a number of individual holdings.

What are the characteristics of a passive investment strategy? ›

Passive investing may offer the following potential benefits:
  • Easy to understand. The strategy is simple — track the index.
  • Low cost. A buy-and-hold strategy minimizes transaction costs. ...
  • Long-term growth. Over time, these indices have historically increased in value.

Are passive funds risky? ›

Less volatile: Passive funds are relatively less risky than active funds because they do not involve unsystematic risks like stock selection.

Does passive investing outperform the market? ›

Passive investing tends to perform better

Despite the fact that they put a lot of effort into it, the vast majority of of active fund managers underperform the market benchmark they're trying to beat. Even when actively managed funds do experience a period of outperformance, it doesn't tend to last long.

Is passive investing long term? ›

However, passive investing typically involves buying and holding investments for the long term, which may limit the ability of an investor to make short-term changes to their portfolio in response to changing market conditions.

What happens if all investors are passive? ›

What's worse about this is not that you as an investor have no choice but to expose yourself to bad companies but that, if we were all passive investors, there would be no mechanism to adequately value companies in the market based on their business, and therefore, it would be virtually impossible to trust the values ...

What are some reasons an investor would choose passive investing over active investing? ›

Reasons to consider passive investing
  • Lower costs. Passively managed investments typically have lower expense ratios and management fees compared to actively managed investments. ...
  • Simplicity. ...
  • Broad diversification. ...
  • Tax-efficiency. ...
  • Ease of access. ...
  • Behavioral benefits.
Dec 12, 2023

What are the benefits of passive funds? ›

Passive funds provide investors with diversification and market-linked returns in a low cost and transparent structure. They are ideal for those seeking broad market exposure for long term wealth creation rather than beating market returns.

Why is passive investing growing? ›

The low fees, transparency, tax efficiency, and buy-and-hold nature of passive funds deeply align with the goals of most long-term investors. These advantages allow more investor capital to work toward building returns rather than being eroded by costs over decades.

What is a major benefit of passive investing its low cost? ›

Advantages of passive investing

Lower costs — Passively invested funds seek to track the benchmarks as closely as possible, meaning they accordingly have less overhead than actively managed funds (sometimes even at 0.1% AUM or less per year).

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