STRATEGIES
With the Odds on Their Side, They
Still Couldn’t Beat the Market
In 2022, conditions were
heavily in stock pickers’ favor, but most trailed the market. This
year looks worse, our columnist says.
Luke Wohlgemuth |
|
By Jeff
Sommer
Jeff Sommer is the
author of Strategies,
a weekly column on markets, finance and the economy. |
April 14, 2023
It’s awfully hard
to beat
the stock market consistently. In 2022, despite many advantages, most
mutual funds couldn’t do it. There are important lessons in that failure for
this year and beyond.
Recall that the S&P
500 declined 19.4 percent last year. It was a miserable time for
just about anyone who held stocks, including those who merely tried to match the
overall market, as I do, using broadly diversified, low-cost
index funds.
But beneath the
market’s surface last year, there were plenty of opportunities that should have
given active stock pickers a competitive advantage over index funds. That’s
because the average stock did better than the overall market, which was heavily
influenced by a relative handful of “megacap” tech stocks
like Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta (Facebook), Microsoft, Nvidia and
Tesla. These giants declined sharply, but the rest of the market did markedly
better.
That meant the odds
actually favored stock pickers last year. They had plenty of companies to choose
from, any one of which would have given them a better performance than the
overall market. And, in fact, as a group, actively managed mutual funds fared
better against the overall market average than they have since 2009.
Even so,
the average actively managed stock mutual fund failed to beat the S&P 500. In an
interview, Anu
R. Ganti, senior director of index investment strategy at S&P Dow
Jones Indices, summarized that mediocre performance this way. “Actively managed
funds underperformed less badly in 2022 than they have in most years,” she said.
“But they still underperformed.”
Tailwinds Helped,
but Not Much
In some respects,
the failure of actively managed mutual funds to beat the broad market indexes
last year is unsurprising. S&P Dow Jones Indices has been running systematic
comparisons of actively managed funds and passively managed funds — a.k.a. index
funds — since 2001.
These studies have
consistently found that the vast majority of active fund managers just can’t
beat the indexes over 10- or 20-year periods, or in most individual years,
either.
From 2010 through
2021, anywhere from 55 percent to 87 percent of actively managed funds that
invest in S&P 500 stocks couldn’t beat that benchmark in any given year.
Compared with that,
the results for 2022 were cause for celebration: About 51 percent of large-cap
stock funds failed to beat the S&P 500.
Active
managers couldn’t quite achieve what random chance would predict — that 50
percent of actively managed funds would beat the index.
In other words,
their performance for 2022 looks slightly worse than the results of a random
coin flip.
That’s unimpressive,
but it was much worse over longer periods. Consider these tallies for funds that
invest in S&P 500 stocks through the end of 2022:
-
Over three years,
74.3 percent of actively managed funds trailed the index.
-
Over five years,
86.5 percent underperformed.
-
Over 10 years,
91.4 percent underperformed.
-
Over 20 years,
94.8 percent underperformed.
As the numbers show,
the longer you ran the horse race, the more actively managed funds fell behind.
Over 20 years
through April 11, the SPDR S&P 500 E.T.F. — one of the many mutual funds and
exchange-traded index funds that track the S&P 500 — returned nearly 10 percent,
annualized. The vast majority of active, stock-picking funds couldn’t match
that.
The Odds Have Gotten
Worse
When you look
carefully at the results for 2022, the performance of actively managed funds is
much worse than it may seem at first glance, because it really wasn’t a
coin flip.
For the
stock market, 2022 was a special year. If there was any year in which stock
pickers should have been able to outperform the broad market indexes, 2022 was
it, yet most still couldn’t
beat the battered stock market.
That augurs poorly
for active managers in 2023 because, so far at least, the odds have shifted.
Once again, consider
“megacap” tech stocks, which had terrible performances last year — much worse
than the S&P 500 as a whole. The S&P 500 is a capitalization-weighted index,
which means that the most valuable stocks in the markets, like those from the
big tech companies, have an outsize effect on stock market returns. When they
decline, the overall index tends to decline. When they rise, the overall market
tends to rise. Often the market moves in lock step, with many stocks heading in
the same direction.
But last year, the
monthly “dispersion” of the S&P 500, which measures “the magnitude of
differences” in the returns of individual stocks in the index, was at its
highest level since 2009. This means that there was more variation in stock
returns, and most individual stocks did much better than the megacap stocks. You
can see this by comparing the standard S&P
500 with an equal-weighted
version, in which a stock like Dish
Network, with a market capitalization of less than $5 billion, has
the same weight as a colossus like Apple,
with a market cap of well over $2 trillion.
In 2022, the
equal-weighted S&P 500 outperformed the standard index by nearly seven
percentage points. That implies that if you just picked stocks randomly last
year, you should have done better than
the overall index because the typical random stock did better than the megacaps
and better than the S&P 500. But most active managers couldn’t do it.
Their chances are
worse this year because the market so far has been very different. Megacap
stocks have been outperforming the average stock in the S&P 500 index, and the
equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 has been trailing the standard,
cap-weighted index. That implies that if you just pick stocks randomly, odds are
that you will trail the overall stock market this year.
And, in
fact, preliminary tallies by Bank of America show that in a horse race between
active large-cap mutual fund managers and the S&P 500 this year, the active
managers have been clobbered. Only 45 percent of active large-cap stock managers
have matched the performance of the S&P 500. Stock pickers are doing better in
some corners of the market, but for the most part, it’s a dismal picture
Improving Your
Chances
It’s definitely
possible to beat the stock market. A small number of people will probably to do
it over the next 20 years. But I don’t know now who those outliers will be.
Similarly, I don’t know the precise direction of the economy or of inflation or
of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policies or of a host of
other monumentally important factors. No one else knows, either.
That’s why I think
it makes sense to embrace humility, accept my limitations and use low-cost index
funds to try to match the returns of the stock and bond markets over the long
run.
To do that, and to
withstand the wrenching shifts in the markets that will surely come, I’ll need
enough cash on hand to pay the bills first. Money-market funds and high-yield,
federally insured savings accounts and certificates of deposit are reasonable
options for that purpose.
Make your own
choice. Some active stock pickers will beat the market averages this year. But
based on history, I think it’s virtually certain that the vast majority won’t
manage to do it over the next 20 years.
Because
I’m trying to improve my odds while investing for the long haul, I’m aiming for
an absolutely average performance.
Jeff Sommer
writes Strategies,
a column on markets, finance and the economy. He also edits business news.
Previously, he was a national editor. At Newsday, he was the foreign editor and
a correspondent in Asia and Eastern Europe.
A version of
this article appears in print on April 16, 2023, Section BU, Page 3 of the New
York edition with the headline: Despite Odds, Stock Pickers Couldn’t Beat the
Market.
© 2023 The
New York Times Company