AJ Bell: 36% of active funds outperform passive in 2023 | Portfolio Adviser (2024)

Over a third of active funds outperformed their passive counterparts in 2023, an uptick of nine percentage points from last year’s 27%, according to AJ Bell’s ‘Manager versus Machine’ report.

The report also revealed that, while the average charge across 10 years for overperforming funds is 86bps, the average fee for underperforming funds increases to 99bps, an issue which has been brought to attention by the FCA’s consumer duty regulation highlighting value for money. While the report claims the data is not sufficient in providing ‘a causal relationship between lower active charges and better performance’ it does ‘undermine the idea that higher charges are associated with better performance from active funds’.

See also: AJ Bell: Tracker fund charge discrepancies are eating into investor capital

Global active funds proved to be a sticky spot for active managers in 2023 as only a quarter managed to outperform the passive vehicles, while active managers made strides in the UK, jumping from just 13% outperforming in 2022 to 44% in 2023. This percentage, however, stills sits far below the 85% of active managers who outperformed in 2021.

Laith Khalaf, head of investment analysis at AJ Bell, said: “This also highlights how the fortunes of active managers are not simply dictated by skill, or lack thereof. Market conditions play their part too.

“As things stand there have been long running trends in markets which have been negative for active managers on the whole, in particular the hegemony of large, US tech companies.”

For 2023, global emerging markets was the best spot for active investors, with 57% outperforming, followed by the UK and the US. However, when considering a 10-year scope, only 44% of active funds kept above the index and the active average return for 10 years only hit 56.5% while passive reached 60.5%.

“While all active fund investors expect outperformance, it’s not statistically possible for all managers to outperform,” Khalaf said.

“Investors therefore need to pick their battles wisely. This means acknowledging that some markets have proved more difficult to beat than others, and selecting active fund managers in whom they have a high degree of conviction.

“A long and successful track record suggests outperformance has been achieved by skill and not just luck, but it’s still no guarantee for the future, so any active portfolio should include several managers for diversification.”

Within passive funds, there is also a large fee disparity in particular sectors. For the UK, the most expensive fund sits at a 1.06% ongoing charge while the least expensive is just 0.05%. Global funds also have a range of 0.52%, and sectors including Asia Pacific ex Japan, global emerging markets, Japan, and the US all have fees with disparities ranging between 0.21 and 0.25%.

“Investors in passive funds shouldn’t be too complacent, either. They still need to make some active decisions in terms of their index selection and picking a competitively priced fund,” Khalaf said.

“The performance gulf between the most expensive and cheapest passive strategies is quite startling, and this is a gap investors can bridge quite easily by simply switching funds.”

In total, active funds have lost £9bn in net retail outflows in the past five years, while passive funds have gained £75bn in net inflows. This has put 2023 on track for the lowest number of active fund launches in a year since 2008, a number which has declined since 2019.

“There also has to be a question of whether passive investing is becoming a bit of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Passive flows allocate money to markets simply based on company size, rather than fundamentals,” Khalaf said.

“This helps support the share prices of the big at the expense of the little, thereby rewarding passive strategies and active managers who buy into the same approach with better performance. These funds may then attract more flows compared to active managers taking a contrarian view, and the cycle continues.

“It’s easy to see how a flood of passive money might help to entrench success and failure, both in markets and in fund management. There will come a saturation point for passive funds, but it shows no sign of making an appearance just yet.”

AJ Bell: 36% of active funds outperform passive in 2023 | Portfolio Adviser (2024)

FAQs

AJ Bell: 36% of active funds outperform passive in 2023 | Portfolio Adviser? ›

In 2023 so far, 36% of active funds have outperformed the average passive alternative (see Table 1). That might not sound like a lot, but it's an improvement on 2022 when just 27% of active managers beat the passive machines.

What is the performance of active funds in 2023? ›

Most Active Managers Failed to Capitalize in 2023

Foreign and fixed-income active funds bounced back in 2023, but were weighed down by US stock-pickers' declining performance. That group notched a success rate of 46% in 2023, versus success rates above 50% for foreign and fixed-income managers in aggregate.

Is active management better than passive management in 2023? ›

As usual, passive U.S. equity funds took in a large sum ($244 billion), while active funds suffered widespread net outflows ($257 billion). Active funds shed assets across all nine U.S. equity categories in 2023. Large-value funds suffered their worst year on an organic-growth basis since 2000.

What proportion of active funds outperform a passive alternative? ›

More than a third of active equity managers outperformed passive counterparts over the last one-year period. Active bond managers did even better, with 62.7% on average outperforming their passive alternative.

Do passive funds outperform active funds? ›

In 2024, total assets in US passive strategies surpassed those in active ones for the first time. Recent data reflects a bigger trend. Passive funds have attracted more inflows than active funds for the past nine years, according to Morningstar fund flow data. Elsewhere, passive long-term strategies continue to lag.

Is active vs passive performance in 2023? ›

Navigating the investment strategies landscape can be daunting, especially when deciding between active and passive investments. In 2023, actively managed funds fell short of their passive peers, with 47% of active strategies surviving and beating their average passive counterpart.

Which fund is best 2023? ›

Best Fund Families of 2023
2023 Rank2022 RankFund Family
19Putnam Investment Management
230Fidelity Investments
346PGIM Investments
443Virtus Investment Partners
41 more rows
Feb 29, 2024

What was the average mutual fund return in 2023? ›

But when it comes to returns, small and mid-cap can outpace their larger peers, although for a short duration. In the year 2023, something similar took place. While large cap funds, on an average, delivered an annual return of 16.15 percent.

How did mutual funds do in 2023? ›

Another rough year for mutual funds

Nope. In fact, by November, mutual fund outflows reached $430 billion, making 2023 the industry's second-worst year. The financial press pronounced actively managed mutual funds dead.

What is the future of the active ETF? ›

Growth Projections: Capitalising on global demand

PwC's Global ETFs survey results reflect heightened optimism among respondents about the continued growth and even greater opportunities for the global ETF market. Global ETF AuM is expected to exceed $19.2 trillion by June 2028.

What is the money market forecast for 2023? ›

Global MMF assets under management (AUM) were USD9. 9 trillion at end-2023, up 17% from the previous year with most of the increase coming in 2H23. US MMF AUM rose 21% to USD6. 3 trillion in 2023 driven by investors taking advantage of high interest rates and deposit outflows after the US regional bank failures.

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