Active Return

Active Return

Active return is the percentage gain or loss of an investment relative to the investment's benchmark. Many fund managers combine active and passive management to create a core and satellite strategy that maintains core holdings in a diversified index fund to minimize risk while also actively managing a satellite component of the portfolio to try to outperform a benchmark. If the benchmark is a specific segment of the market, the same portfolio could hypothetically underperform the broader market and still have a positive active return relative to the chosen benchmark. A portfolio that outperforms the market has a positive active return, assuming that the market as a whole is the benchmark. For example, if the benchmark return is 5% and the actual return is 8%, the active return would then be 3% (8% - 5% = 3%).

Active return is a reference to how much an investment gains or loses, on a percentage base, when compared to its benchmark.

What Is Active Return?

Active return is the percentage gain or loss of an investment relative to the investment's benchmark. A benchmark might be market comprehensive, such as the Standard and Poor's 500 Index (S&P 500), or sector-specific, such as the Dow Jones U.S. Financials Index. 

An active return is a difference between the benchmark and the actual return. It can be positive or negative and is typically used to assess performance. Companies that seek active returns are known as “active fund managers” and are usually asset management firms or hedge funds.

Active return is a reference to how much an investment gains or loses, on a percentage base, when compared to its benchmark.
Active return can either be positive or negative and is seen as a sign of the investment's strength or lack thereof.
Active mutual funds are built around managers chasing active returns, or essentially, trying to "beat the market."
Those who invest in actively-managed funds believe that under a talented manager the fund will outperform a passively-managed one.
But critics argue that statistically, passively-managed funds that don't try to beat the market tend to do better in the long run.

How Active Return Works

A portfolio that outperforms the market has a positive active return, assuming that the market as a whole is the benchmark. For example, if the benchmark return is 5% and the actual return is 8%, the active return would then be 3% (8% - 5% = 3%).

If the same portfolio returned only 4%, it would have a negative active return of -1% (4% - 5% = -1%).

If the benchmark is a specific segment of the market, the same portfolio could hypothetically underperform the broader market and still have a positive active return relative to the chosen benchmark. This is why it is crucial for investors to know the benchmark a fund uses and why.

Chasing Active Returns

Legendary investor Warren Buffet believes most investors would achieve better returns by investing in an index fund as opposed to trying to beat the market. He believes that any active returns fund managers make get eroded by fees. Research from S&P and Dow Jones Indices supports Buffet’s thinking. Data revealed that, even if fund managers had a successful three-year record of generating active returns, they underperformed the benchmark in the following three years.

Many fund managers combine active and passive management to create a core and satellite strategy that maintains core holdings in a diversified index fund to minimize risk while also actively managing a satellite component of the portfolio to try to outperform a benchmark.

Active Return Strategies

Fund managers who are seeking active returns try to detect and exploit short-term price movements by using fundamental and technical analysis. For example, a manager may create a portfolio that consists of stocks that have a low debt-to-equity ratio and pay a dividend yield above 3%. Another manager may buy stocks that have formed an inverse head and shoulders reversal chart pattern. Fund managers also closely follow trading patterns, news, and order flow in their endeavor to achieve active returns.

Related terms:

Active Risk

Active risk is a type of risk that a fund or managed portfolio creates as it attempts to beat the returns of the benchmark against which it is compared.  read more

Benchmark

A benchmark is a standard against which the performance of a security, mutual fund or investment manager can be measured. read more

Debt-to-Equity (D/E) Ratio & Formula

The debt-to-equity (D/E) ratio indicates how much debt a company is using to finance its assets relative to the value of shareholders’ equity. read more

Excess Returns

Excess returns are returns achieved above and beyond the return of a proxy. Excess returns will depend on a designated investment return comparison for analysis. read more

Index Fund

An index fund is a pooled investment vehicle that passively seeks to replicate the returns of some market indexes. read more

Index Hugger

An index hugger is a managed mutual fund that tends to perform much like a benchmark index. read more

Indexing

Indexing may be a statistical measure for tracking economic data, a methodology for grouping a specific market segment, or an investment management strategy for passive investments. read more

Portfolio

A portfolio is a collection of financial investments like stocks, bonds, commodities, cash, and cash equivalents, including mutual funds and ETFs. read more

Portfolio Management

Portfolio management involves selecting and overseeing a group of investments that meet a client's long-term financial objectives and risk tolerance. read more

S&P 500 Index – Standard & Poor's 500 Index

The S&P 500 Index (the Standard & Poor's 500 Index) is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the 500 largest publicly traded companies in the U.S. read more