For asset owners, this suggests that active risk is best deployed selectively, rather than evenly across equity allocations. We think investors should lean into active in markets that meaningfully reward skill with better portfolio outcomes.
Does that mean avoiding active for US and global equities, which are staple allocations for many asset owners? Not necessarily. There’s ample evidence that active investing strategies in US and global markets can deliver results over the long term and there are effective ways to access these markets for diverse risk appetites. In addition, periods of underperformance often revert to the mean and are followed by strong relative returns, as the recent rebound of value and emerging markets illustrates.
Applying Lessons on Risk Taking
One of the clearest lessons of recent years is that how risk is taken matters as much as how much risk is taken. In concentrated markets, deviating from a benchmark—the hallmark of active investing—became fraught with risk. That’s why high-tracking error strategies haven’t consistently been rewarded, while more controlled approaches have often delivered more predictable outcomes.
As a result, asset owners should scrutinize active risk budgets more closely by asking the following questions:
- What’s my time horizon and risk tolerance?
- Does the source of active risk match my stated outcome objectives?
- Have I allocated to distinctive outcomes and differentiated approaches?
- How have I adjusted the size of my allocation to reflect the range of risks to the outcomes?
The answers to these questions can help guide investors to the most appropriate strategies for their objectives.
Lower-tracking-error strategies with clear alpha objectives can provide resilience, especially in concentrated markets. Strategies like these can be valuable for investors with shorter time horizons, because they often deliver more consistent results when style and factor returns swing.
Higher-conviction strategies still have a role to play in allocations, particularly for investors with a higher risk tolerance and longer time horizon. It’s true that some portfolios with higher tracking error based on style-investing philosophies have struggled through concentrated markets. Yet, we think skilled managers are still capable of delivering alpha over time, as we’ve seen in the recent strong recovery of value equity strategies. That said, asset owners need to carefully consider how these types of strategies fit into their long-term allocations. Portfolio construction, risk management and a strategy’s ability to adapt will redefine future active success in a reshaped market landscape.
The Role of an Industrial System of Performance
This also points to a broader lesson for asset owners: in more complex markets, long-term success depends not just on conviction or style exposures, but on how consistently insights are translated into portfolio decisions. That puts greater emphasis on integrated investment systems—processes that combine research, risk management and portfolio construction in a disciplined, repeatable way.
1. Clearly defined standards for research excellence
Strong research requires clear points of view and explicit risk framing that should articulate what matters, why it matters and what would invalidate the thesis. And when benchmarks are dominated by a small number of stocks, underweights can be just as consequential as overweights. Effective risk management must treat both symmetrically.
2. Integration of fundamental, quantitative and AI enabled insights
Investment processes that are purely fundamental or purely quantitative may be too narrow. Quantitative tools can enhance risk control, signal validation and portfolio construction, while fundamental research provides context, judgment and conviction. AI is sharpening both dimensions by improving research efficiency and expanding analytical breadth.
3. Continuous improvement driven by data and decision analytics
Markets evolve and so must investment processes. Data driven evaluation of decisions, sizing and timing helps distinguish skill from noise and allows teams to learn systematically from outcomes across cycles.
For asset owners, assessing whether managers have institutionalized these capabilities is as important as reviewing recent performance. Robust systems increase the probability that performance can be repeated and adapted as market conditions change.
In today’s environment, asset owners should consider several guiding principles when allocating to active equities: