Active Equity Investing: Strategies (2024)

Refresher Reading

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2021 Curriculum CFA Program Level III Portfolio Management and Wealth Planning

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Introduction

This reading provides an overview of active equity investing and the major types of active equity strategies. The reading is organized around a classification of active equity strategies into two broad approaches: fundamental and quantitative. Both approaches aim at outperforming a passive benchmark (for example, a broad equity market index), but they tend to make investment decisions differently. Fundamental approaches stress the use of human judgment in processing information and making investment decisions, whereas quantitative approaches tend to rely more heavily on rules-based quantitative models. As a result, some practitioners and academics refer to the fundamental, judgment-based approaches as “discretionary” and to the rules-based, quantitative approaches as “systematic.”

This reading is organized as follows. Section 2 introduces fundamental and quantitative approaches to active management. Section 3 discusses bottom-up, top-down, factor-based, and activist investing strategies. Section 4 describes the process of creating fundamental active investment strategies, including the parameters to consider as well as some of the pitfalls. Section 5 describes the steps required to create quantitative active investment strategies, as well as the pitfalls in a quantitative investment process. Section 6 discusses style classifications of active strategies and the uses and limitations of such classifications. A summary of key points completes the reading.

Learning Outcomes

The member should be able to:

  1. compare fundamental and quantitative approaches to active management;

  2. analyze bottom-up active strategies, including their rationale and associated processes;

  3. analyze top-down active strategies, including their rationale and associated processes;

  4. analyze factor-based active strategies, including their rationale and associated processes;

  5. analyze activist strategies, including their rationale and associated processes;

  6. describe active strategies based on statistical arbitrage and market microstructure;

  7. describe how fundamental active investment strategies are created;

  8. describe how quantitative active investment strategies are created;

  9. discuss equity investment style classifications.

Summary

This reading discusses the different approaches to active equity management and describes how the various strategies are created. It also addresses the style classification of active approaches.

  • Active equity management approaches can be generally divided into two groups: fundamental (also referred to as discretionary) and quantitative (also known as systematic or rules-based). Fundamental approaches stress the use of human judgment in arriving at an investment decision, whereas quantitative approaches stress the use of rules-based, quantitative models to arrive at a decision.

  • The main differences between fundamental and quantitative approaches include the following characteristics: approach to the decision-making process (subjective versus objective); forecast focus (stock returns versus factor returns); information used (research versus data); focus of the analysis (depth versus breadth); orientation to the data (forward looking versus backward looking); and approach to portfolio risk (emphasis on judgment versus emphasis on optimization techniques).

  • The main types of active management strategies include bottom-up, top-down, factor-based, and activist.

  • Bottom-up strategies begin at the company level, and use company and industry analyses to assess the intrinsic value of the company and determine whether the stock is undervalued or overvalued relative to its market price.

  • Fundamental managers often focus on one or more of the following company and industry characteristics: business model and branding, competitive advantages, and management and corporate governance.

  • Bottom-up strategies are often divided into value-based approaches and growth-based approaches.

  • Top-down strategies focus on the macroeconomic environment, demographic trends, and government policies to arrive at investment decisions.

  • Top-down strategies are used in several investment decision processes, including the following: country and geographic allocation, sector and industry rotation, equity style rotation, volatility-based strategies, and thematic investment strategies.

  • Quantitative equity investment strategies often use factor-based models. A factor-based strategy aims to identify significant factors that drive stock prices and to construct a portfolio with a positive bias towards such factors.

  • Factors can be grouped based on fundamental characteristics—such as value, growth, and price momentum—or on unconventional data.

  • Activist investors specialize in taking meaningful stakes in listed companies and influencing those companies to make changes to their management, strategy, or capital structures for the purpose of increasing the stock’s value and realizing a gain on their investment.

  • Statistical arbitrage (or “stat arb”) strategies use statistical and technical analysis to exploit pricing anomalies and achieve superior returns. Pairs trading is an example of a popular and simple statistical arbitrage strategy.

  • Event-driven strategies exploit market inefficiencies that may occur around corporate events such as mergers and acquisitions, earnings announcements, bankruptcies, share buybacks, special dividends, and spinoffs.

  • The fundamental active investment process includes the following steps: define the investment universe; prescreen the universe; understand the industry and business; forecast the company’s financial performance; convert forecasts into a target price; construct the portfolio with the desired risk profile; and rebalance the portfolio according to a buy and sell discipline.

  • Pitfalls in fundamental investing include behavioral biases, the value trap, and the growth trap.

  • Behavioral biases can be divided into two groups: cognitive errors and emotional biases. Typical biases that are relevant to active equity management include confirmation bias, illusion of control, availability bias, loss aversion, overconfidence, and regret aversion.

  • The quantitative active investment process includes the following steps: define the investment thesis; acquire, clean, and process the data; backtest the strategy; evaluate the strategy; and construct an efficient portfolio using risk and trading cost models.

  • The pitfalls in quantitative investing include look-ahead and survivorship biases, overfitting, data mining, unrealistic turnover assumptions, transaction costs, and short availability.

  • An investment style generally splits the stock universe into two or three groups, such that each group contains stocks with similar characteristics. The common style characteristics used in active management include value, size, price momentum, volatility, high dividend, and earnings quality. A stock’s membership in an industry, sector, or country group is also used to classify the investment style.

  • Two main approaches are often used in style analysis: a returns-based approach and a holdings-based approach. Holdings-based approaches aggregate the style scores of individual holdings, while returns-based approaches analyze the investment style of portfolio managers by comparing the returns of the strategy to those of a set of style indexes.

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Active Equity Investing: Strategies (2024)

FAQs

What is the active equity investment strategy? ›

Active equity investing is based on the concept that a skilled portfolio manager can both identify and differentiate between the most attractive securities and the least attractive securities—typically relative to a pre-specified benchmark.

What are the limitations of active investing? ›

Limitations of Active Investing

Investors who invest with an active investment manager, such as a hedge fund, typically have to pay a management fee, regardless of how successfully the fund performs. Active management fees can range from 0.10% to over 2% of assets under management (AUM).

Which is better, passive or active investing? ›

Passive investment is less expensive, less complex, and often produces superior after-tax results over medium to long time horizons when compared to actively managed portfolios.

What is the equity strategy of investing? ›

Quantitative equity investment strategies often use factor-based models. A factor-based strategy aims to identify significant factors that drive stock prices and to construct a portfolio with a positive bias towards such factors.

How does active investing work? ›

Active investing means investing in funds whose portfolio managers select investments based on an independent assessment of their worth—essentially, trying to choose the most attractive investments. Generally speaking, the goal of active managers is to “beat the market,” or outperform certain standard benchmarks.

What is an active investment example? ›

Active investment is a form of investment strategy that involves actively buying and selling assets in the hope of making profits and outperforming a benchmark or index. An example of an active investor is a hedge fund manager, who constantly monitors the market and trades when they see an opportunity to make money.

Does active investing outperform the market? ›

Actively managed investments charge larger fees to pay for the extensive research and analysis required to beat index returns. But although many managers succeed in this goal each year, few are able to beat the markets consistently, Wharton faculty members say.

Who manages the funds in active investing? ›

Active investing, as its name implies, takes a hands-on approach and requires that someone act as a portfolio manager—whether that person is managing their own portfolio or professionally managing one.

Why do people invest in actively managed funds? ›

As well as a larger investment universe, active managers can choose how much to invest in a particular company, unlike passive funds where holding size is dictated by a company's market capitalisation.

Does active investing have high or low fees? ›

Disadvantages of active investing

Generally higher fees — Active management fees can run from anywhere between 0.2% and 2% of the assets under management (AUM) annually, as compared to the expense ratios seen in passive ETF investment options, which average between 0.1% and 1%.

What investment strategy is the best? ›

Taking a buy-and-hold approach to investing is both the simplest and most dependable way to achieve substantial portfolio returns.

What is an active equity? ›

Active Equities invests in both public and soon-to-be public companies, leveraging long-term fundamental research to generate unique company specific insights. Active Equities mandate is to deliver alpha in the global public equity markets.

Why is equity a good investment? ›

Investing in equities allows you to earn a high return rate that can potentially beat the inflation rate by a large margin. This is how equities facilitate wealth creation in the long term. History is proof, stock indexes have consistently outperformed return on debt and other investments instruments in the long term.

What is a strategic equity investment? ›

Strategic equity investing is an approach that takes the best of private equity and listed equity investment strategies, and makes them work for the investor.

What is an example of an active portfolio strategy? ›

Examples of Active Portfolio Strategy

Value Investing − Using fundamental research and long-term growth possibilities, this technique actively chooses cheap stocks.

What techniques are considered active equity portfolio management strategies? ›

These techniques include asset allocation, security selection, risk management, market timing, fundamental analysis, and technical analysis. Successful active portfolio managers use a combination of these techniques to identify undervalued securities and adjust asset allocations.

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