Saturday, January 1, 2022

Define Active Management

 Active Management

What Is Active Management and How Does It Work?

The word "active management" refers to a professional money manager or a team of experts that monitor a client's investment portfolio's performance and make regular purchase, hold, and sell decisions concerning the assets in it. The active manager's objective is to outperform the market as a whole.

When deciding which assets to purchase and sell, active managers can use investment analysis, research, and projections, as well as their own judgement and expertise.

 

Passive management, sometimes known as indexing, is the polar opposite of active management. Those who believe in passive management believe that the greatest outcomes are obtained by purchasing assets that mimic a certain market index or indexes and keeping them for the long term, disregarding market changes.

Active Management: An Overview

Investors who believe in active management do not subscribe to the efficient market hypothesis, which claims that beating the market over time is impossible. That is, stockpickers who spend their days buying and selling companies in order to profit from their frequent swings will do no better in the long run than investors who buy the components of big indexes that track the performance of the broader markets.

TAKEAWAYS IMPORTANT

·       To profit from market changes, active management necessitates regular monitoring and frequent purchase and sell decisions.

·       Passive management is a buy-and-hold approach that seeks to match the market's returns.

·       Active management aims for returns that outperform the market as a whole.

Active managers, on the other hand, assess their own success by comparing how well their portfolios outperform (or underperform) a comparable unmanaged index, industry, or market sector.

 

The Russell 1000 Growth Index, for example, serves as the benchmark for the Fidelity Blue Chip Growth Fund. The Fidelity fund returned 17.35 percent for the five years ending June 30, 2020, while the Russell 1000 Growth Index returned 15.89 percent. For that five-year period, the Fidelity fund exceeded its benchmark by 1.46 percent.

Active Management Techniques

Active managers think that any of a range of methods aimed at identifying stocks that are trading at a lower price than their value deserves might profit from the stock market.

Investment firms and fund sponsors believe they can beat the market, so they hire professional investment managers to oversee their mutual funds.

Active Management's Drawbacks

Fees are greater for actively managed funds than for passively managed funds. The investor is paying for the long-term efforts of active investment managers, as well as the possibility for larger returns than the markets as a whole.

IMPORTANT: There is no consensus on whether active or passive management produces superior results.

Passive management involves a one-time effort to choose the correct assets for an individual investor, as well as periodic rebalancing and due diligence in watching the portfolio over time.

When contemplating active management, investors should examine the manager's real results after fees.

The Benefits of Active Management

In an actively managed fund, investors use the skills, experience, and judgement of the fund manager. An active manager running an automobile sector fund can have a lot of knowledge in the business and invest in a small number of auto-related firms that he thinks are undervalued.

Managers of active funds have additional options. There is greater flexibility in the selection process than in an index fund, which must match the selection and weighting of the investments in the index as precisely as feasible.

Tax advantages are available with actively managed funds. Managers can offset failures with winnings thanks to the flexibility of buying and selling.

Risk Management

Risks can be managed more nimbly by active fund managers. It may be necessary for a global banking exchange-traded fund (ETF) to contain a certain number of British banks. Following the unexpected Brexit vote in 2016, the value of the investment is likely to have plummeted. Meanwhile, owing to increased risk, an actively managed global banking fund may have cut its exposure to British banks.

Active managers can also use a variety of hedging tactics, including as short selling and employing derivatives, to reduce risk.

Performance of Active Management

The performance of active managers has been the subject of much debate. Whether they succeed or fail is mainly determined by which of the contradicting statistics is used.

Active managers that invested in large-cap value companies were the most likely to outperform the index over the ten years ending in 2017, outperforming by 1.13 percent on average each year. Before fees were removed, 84 percent of active managers in this category exceeded their benchmark index, according to a survey.

Active managers, on the other hand, underperformed the index by 0.36 percent on average over three years, and by 0.22 percent over five years.

 

According to another study, actively managed funds returned 3.7 percent on average yearly for the 30 years ending in 2016, compared to 10% for passively managed funds.


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