Passive Investing = Broken Markets. Discuss. (2024)

Earlier this month, US hedge fund investor David Einhorn gave one of the more fascinating interviews I've heard in recent years.

For those that don't know him, Einhorn has run Greenlight Capital since 1996 and is well-known for having shorted Lehmann Brothers prior to the 2008 bust.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Einhorn declares passive investing has fundamentally broken markets, and that the changes it has wrought mean he's had to change his method of value investing to stay in business.

Does Passive Investing Distort Markets?

The claim that passive investing distorts markets isn't new. Active managers have long complained about the issue. Yet Einhorn makes some important observations about how he thinks indexing is changing the structure of markets:

"There's all the machine money and algorithmic money […] which doesn’t have an opinion about value," he says. "It has an opinion about price."

"Like what is the price going to be in 15 minutes? And I want to be ahead of that or zero-day options. What is the price of the S&P or whatever stock you're doing for today, what's it going to be in the next half hour, two hours, three hours?

"Those are opinions about price. Those are not opinions about value. Passive investors have no opinion about value. They're going to assume everybody else’s done the work, right?"

Of active management, Einhorn says this:

"And then you have all of what's left of active management and so much of it, the value industry has gotten completely annihilated," he continues.

"So, if you have a situation where money is moved from active to passive, when that happens, the value managers get redeemed, the value stocks go down more, it causes more redemptions of the value managers, it causes those stocks to go down more.

"All of a sudden, the people who are performing are the people who own the overvalued things, that are getting the flows from the indices, that are getting you take the money out of the value, put it in the index, they're selling cheap stuff and they're buying, you know whatever the highest multiple, most overvalued things […] in disproportionate weight.

"So, then the active managers who participate in that area of the market get flows and they buy even more of that stuff. So, what happens is instead of stocks reverting toward value, they actually diverge from value. And that's a change in the market and it's a structure that means that almost the best way to get your stock to go up is to start by being overvalued."

How Passive Changed a Business Model

How Einhorn has adapted to the changes in markets is intriguing. Einhorn had a fantastic track record in the almost 20 years to 2015. Then he had two awful years and three mediocre ones. Some of you may recall news publications started to question his ability during this time, if they didn't write him off altogether.

How Einhorn came through this period is instructive. He analysed his period of underperformance and realised he had continually bought cheap stocks and when these stocks handily beat earnings estimates, they weren't being re-rated by the market. Because they were outside of indices and not included in exchange-traded funds, there were few buyers. This happened often enough that it made him change his investment style.

"What we have to do now is be even more disciplined on price," he says.

"So, we're not buying things at 10 times or 11 times earnings. We're buying things at four times earnings, five times earnings, and we're buying them where they have huge buybacks, and we can't count on other long only investors to buy our things after us.

"We’re going to have to get paid by the company. So we need 15-20% cash flow type of type of numbers. And if that cash is then being returned to us, we're going to do pretty well over time […] you’re literally counting on the companies to make that happen for you."

Since Einhorn has made these changes, he's gone back to handily beating the benchmarks.

Passive a Goliath in US, Gaining Ground in UK

Einhorn's comments raise several important questions about today's markets.

There's little doubt that passive investing is growing quickly and taking market share from active funds. Last month, for the first time, passively-managed funds in the US controlled more assets than did their actively managed competitors. In the UK the world of active management still dominates, but is under no less pressure to demonstrate its worth.

For instance, the Morningstar Active Passive Barometer report showed last year that, in an environment where active managers really should have proved their worth, their efforts amounted to nothing other than a blatant failure.

The relentless growth in passive funds has resulted in the largest ETF and index providers growing into behemoths. Blackrock now has the equivalent of £7.4 trillion under management, while Vanguard has the equivalent of £5.6 trillion.

Further growth in passive funds seems likely, with investors attracted to the simple and low-cost access that ETFs provide to markets, as well as their performance versus active funds.

The Other Big Market Trend

Along with the rise of passive funds, there's also been the institutionalisation of markets.

In the US, professional money managers accounted for 10% of share ownership after the Second World War. That's risen to close to 67% today. It means that, in the 1940s and 1950s, active fund managers had far fewer direct competitors– their main competitors were private citizens.

Professional fund managers are hired and fired according to how they perform compared to benchmarks. As passive funds pile into the stocks included in benchmarks, it's likely active managers are being forced into buying into the same stocks to keep up with these benchmarks. If they're buying into the same stocks as passive funds, and charging higher fees to clients, it isn't a surprise active funds have consistently underperformed passive ones over the past decade.

That's why Einhorn is complaining that passive funds are breaking markets. He's saying individual investors are fleeing into passive funds, and these funds are buying stocks included in indices, which are principally the larger companies. And they are doing that automatically, without regard to price. To keep up with benchmarks and passive funds, active funds are then buying into the same stocks.

According to Einhorn, stocks that are outside of benchmarks are then being ignored by individual and professional investors. Even if these stocks are undervalued and their fundamentals are improving, there are few (if any) buyers for these companies.

Are Einhorn's Concerns Valid?

There is some anecdotal and academic evidence to support Einhorn's claims.

For instance, it does seem larger cap stocks are getting more investor love than at any time in recent history. Late last year, Goldman Sachs did a study that found the S&P 500 is more concentrated than it's ever been. The average weight of top 10 stocks in the S&P 500 index has been 20% over the past 35 years. During the dot-com bubble, the combined weight of top 10 stocks peaked at 25%. Today, the figure stands at 32%.

Passive Investing = Broken Markets. Discuss. (1)

That's led to significant outperformance from large cap stocks versus small caps. Last year, US large caps returned 26.2% compared to US small caps' 16.8%. Since 2011, large caps there have returned 382%, or 13% annualised, versus small caps' 208%, or 9% per annum.

There’s also academic evidence that backs some of Einhorn’s assertions.

In a 2022 paper How Competitive is the Stock Market?,UCLA's Valentin Haddad and colleagues found the rise of passive investing was distorting price signals and pushing up the volatility of the US market.

The paper examined institutional investors and concluded the rise of passive investors' share of the US market over the past two decades "has led to substantially more inelastic aggregate demand curves for individual stocks, by 15%." Passive investors have a demand elasticity of zero, because they automatically buy stocks without regard to whether it's cheap or not. If a stock is cheap, demand from passive investors won't increase.

In theory, that should mean other investors step in to make up the demand shortfall in stocks, but the paper suggested that hadn't happened.

What Are The Counterarguments to Einhorn?

The anecdotal evidence mentioned above is just that, however: anecdotal. The academic evidence is also relatively new and untested.

There are several potential counterarguments to Einhorn's assertions. They include:

1. The influence of passive funds on market prices may be less than claimed.

Passive funds typically have low turnover, of 10-20% each year. That compares to active funds of +50%. Trading sets prices, and therefore the influence of passive investing on pricing may be overstated.

2. Irrational stock markets should, in theory, help active investors.

If markets are fully rational and price stocks perfectly, active investing would be redundant.

3. Indexing may aid price discovery rather than hinder it.

For example, it increases the supply of lendable shares and thus enables short selling.

The Danger of Passive Investing for Markets

Nonetheless, Einhorn is right to point out the changes that passive investing is bringing to markets. If passive investors are crowding into the large cap stocks that dominate indices, and active investors are mimicking them to keep up with performance benchmarks, it's logical the reverse can happen too. That is, in a market downturn, there may be a rush for the exits as both passive and active investors get out of large cap stocks. This may become even more of an issue as passive funds continue to take market share from active peers.

There also hasn't been a real test of this sort for passive investing. That said, markets did remain relatively orderly in 2022 when they were hit hard. A larger market downturn would be a real test for passive investing and the changes it's made to markets. Whether it leads to a shakeout in passive funds is also an open question.

Investors Can Learn From Einhorn

Whatever your view, you can credit Einhorn for changing his investment style to adapt to the changes that he sees in markets. Here was a guy known as one of the best hedge fund investors in the world going through an extended rough patch. He could have easily doubled down on the strategy that had brought him results and fame over the previous years. Instead, he questioned that strategy and decided to change tack.

It would have been a big risk to change investment style at that time. He was under a lot of pressure from his clients and the media. If it went wrong, he would have looked foolish, and it might have been game over for his fund. Instead, it helped him turn things around.

This article was originally published on our Australia site and has been edited for UK readers

Passive Investing = Broken Markets. Discuss. (2024)

FAQs

Has passive investing broken the market? ›

David Einhorn put it bluntly: The valuation-be-damned boom in passive investing has “fundamentally broken” markets as it proceeds to crush the time-honoured hunt for cheap-looking stocks across Wall Street year after year.

What are the arguments against passive investing? ›

Too many limitations: Passive funds are limited to a specific index or predetermined set of investments with little to no variance. Thus, investors are locked into those holdings, no matter what happens in the market.

What is one disadvantage of the passive strategy? ›

Disadvantages: Limited Upside: By mirroring the market, passive investments will never outperform the index they track. No Downside Protection: During market downturns, passive strategies do not adjust to mitigate losses.

What are some of the issues related to the rise of passive investing? ›

The inexorable trend to passive investing creates numerous issues for fund management, including fee and revenue pressure, which forces traditional managers to seek new revenue streams, such as illiquid and private assets, which also implies increased portfolio risk.

How often does passive investing beat active investing? ›

Less than one out of every four active strategies survived and beat their average passive counterpart over the ten years through December 2023. One type of active investment strategy generally trails in long-term success rates.

How does passive investing work? ›

Passive investing is a long-term investment strategy that focuses on buying and holding investments for the long term. Its goal is to build wealth gradually over time by buying and holding a diverse portfolio of investments and relying on the market to provide positive returns over time.

Is passive investing a high risk? ›

Advantages of passive investing

Consistent and low-risk returns — Because of the extreme diversification in most passively traded funds, investors will usually see a consistent return on their investment with generally lower-risk active management.

What are the 5 advantages of passive investing? ›

2.1) Advantages of Passive Investing
  • Lower Cost, Lower Turnover and Higher Tax Efficiency means more money invested;
  • Focus is on “Time in the Market”, not “Timing the Market”;
  • Fully Invested in all Major Companies; and.
  • Higher Likelihood of Capturing Market Returns than Active.

Which is a negative consequence of being passive? ›

At its core, passive behavior is generally a form of psychological defense that can lead to feelings of helplessness, low self-esteem, and even depression.

How does passive investing affect market efficiency? ›

With those insights in mind, what effect has the increase in passive ownership had on the ability of active managers to add value? The active community argues that less informational efficiency and less price discovery by active managers leads to market mispricing and more opportunity for active managers to add value.

What is the purpose of passive investing? ›

Passive investing is a less-involved investing strategy and focused more on the long-term. Passive investors aren't trading in an attempt to profit off of short-term market fluctuations. Instead, they add money to their portfolios at regular intervals, whether the market is up or down.

Why is passive investing growing? ›

Further growth in passive funds seems likely, with investors attracted to the simple and low-cost access that ETFs provide to markets, as well as their performance versus active funds.

Does passive investing outperform the market? ›

Sometimes, a passive fund may beat the market by a little, but it will never post the significant returns active managers crave unless the market itself booms. Reliance on others: Because passive investors generally rely on fund managers to make decisions, they don't specifically get to say in what they're invested in.

Has any investor beaten the market? ›

Household names like Peter Lynch and Warren Buffett achieved their successes by picking individual stocks. Many individuals you've never heard of have attempted similar strategies and failed. Even most professional mutual fund managers can't beat the market.

Is passive investing growing? ›

Passive a Goliath in US, Gaining Ground in UK

There's little doubt that passive investing is growing quickly and taking market share from active funds. Last month, for the first time, passively-managed funds in the US controlled more assets than did their actively managed competitors.

Is the goal of passive investing to match the market? ›

If you're a passive investor, you wouldn't undergo the process of assessing the virtue of any specific investment. Your goal would be to match the performance of certain market indexes rather than trying to outperform them.

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