Is 'Smart Beta' the New Active Investing?
20 April 2016
Globally the debate has long moved on from active versus passive to how these can be combined to assist an investor with optimally achieving their overall investment objectives.
We believe that both active and passive funds can blend well together in a diversified portfolio, and that much of the perceived disparity between the two is due to the few remaining myths that still surround active versus passive.
The new challenge today is how to blend active and passive building blocks together to build more diversified, risk-smart portfolios. Understanding the risk factors in your portfolio will lead to better insights and more informed portfolio construction decisions, says Jason Liddle, CIO of Satrix.
Before we begin, let us first distinguish between ‘beta’ and ‘alpha’. Simply put, (market) beta is the sensitivity that a portfolio has to the market. Previously, any outperformance of the market was termed alpha.
The industry has since sharpened their pencils on this phenomenon called ‘alpha’ and, what they have found says Liddle, is that it consists of common risk characteristics. In general, an active investment manager’s process would systematically gravitate or produce portfolios with a particular risk character. This is due to their philosophy and how they filter, analyse and construct their portfolios. The passive industry is able to extract this risk characteristic (value, momentum, quality, etc) for retirement funds and other institutional investors. As a result, the previous concept of alpha has slowly faded over the last decade.
Over the next few years, ongoing passive product innovation is likely to reign with the retirement fund member being the ultimate beneficiary.