Is Passive Ownership Bigger than Estimated? (2024)

By Tommi Johnsen, PhD|Published On: August 22nd, 2022|Categories: Research Insights, Basilico and Johnsen, Academic Research Insight, Active and Passive Investing|

  • Alex Chinco and Marco Sammon
  • SSRN Working Paper
  • A version of this paper can be foundhere
  • Want to read our summaries of academic finance papers? Check out our Academic Research Insight category.

What are the research questions?

  1. How much of the US stock market do passive investors own?
  2. What accounts for the difference between published numbers and this study?
  3. What does this research say about portfolio construction, if anything?

What are the Academic Insights?

  1. The authors of this study develop and present a methodology for estimating the passive portion of the US equity market. Generally speaking, the increased volume that occurs at the close on reconstitution day, due to additions and deletions to the index, is converted to the total amount of capital tied to a particular index. This method captures strict end-of-day indexers and indicates that the generally accepted published value could be off by a factor of 2. For the most recent period, the authors estimate the passive portion is closer to 37.8%. Now compare that estimate to the value of 15%, published by the Investment Company Institute (ICI) as of the end of 2020. The ICI calculates the sum of index mutual funds and ETF ownership of the US equity market, as an estimate of passively managed funds. The results for 2011 to 2021 are presented in Figure 1 below. Note that the estimate hovers around 2x the ICI value across the years examined. The implication: Index funds and ETFs only account for at least 50% of all passively managed funds over the recent decade.
  2. Here’s the caveat: End-of-day indexers are not captured in the ICI number. However, using this additional source of passive investing, the authors are able to use the count of ownership of end-of-day indexers to fill in potential gaps (more like craters?) in coverage. End-of-day indexers are strictly passive investors who rebalance to their assigned benchmark at the end of every trading day. Pension funds and other institutional investors likely make up the difference. In this case, the subset of passive investors included here are tracking either the S&P500 or Russell 1000 or 2000. Given there are only 3 indexes examined, the 37.8% is really a lower bound on the estimate of passive ownership in the US equity market. Taking that argument a bit further, a portion of passive investors rebalance at a much more leisurely pace and are not limited to end-of-day constraints. Again, the authors do not include that group in the 37.8%.
  3. If the numbers presented in this research are more accurate by a factor of 2x, then the impact on modeling portfolio holdings could become a real issue. If investors are trying to determine what securities are held, why they are held, and who holds them in a portfolio, then index membership becomes has an order of magnitude of explanatory power exceeding that of our well-known pricing models. Not a surprising result, given that risk measures for client portfolios, are lower if the universe of stocks consists only of stocks with membership. Although substitute stocks can be substituted by most risk models (MSCI-Barra, Northfield, etc.), if they are used, the estimate of tracking error will always be larger, depending on the number of stocks that have similar risk characteristics but are not members of the targeted index.

Why does it matter?

To the degree that policy decisions made around the degree of informativeness of market prices plus investor welfare are dependent on empirical measures of the magnitude of passive investing, this research argues for caution. If the size of the passive market is understated by half in calculations, then the models used to inform policymakers need revision. Is the information content of market prices sufficient to guarantee the interests of market participants are well-served?

Why is it that no one else noticed this before? The approach presented here may be the wrong way to think about passive investing, or the theoretical models we have are simply incomplete but not incorrect.

A final thought from the authors:

Regardless of which interpretation you prefer, new methods are clearly needed when it comes to modeling the rise of passive investing. Existing models are not precise enough to recognize that the US passive-ownership share was off by a factor of two. The size of this blind spot poses a real problem for anyone trying to use these models to make policy decisions.

The most important chart from the paper

Is Passive Ownership Bigger than Estimated? (1)

Abstract

We estimate that passive investors held at least 37.8% of the US stock market in 2020. This estimate is based on the closing volumes of index additions and deletions on reconstitution days. 37.8% is more than double the widely accepted previous value of 15%, which represents the combined holdings of all index funds. What’s more, 37.8% is a lower bound. The true passive-ownership share for the US stock market must be higher. This result suggests that index membership is the single most important consideration when modeling investors’ portfolio choice. In addition, existing models studying the rise of passive investing give no hint that prior estimates for the passive-ownership share were 50% too small. The size of this oversight restricts how useful these models can be for policymakers.

About the Author: Tommi Johnsen, PhD

Is Passive Ownership Bigger than Estimated? (3)

Tommi Johnsen is the former Director of the Reiman School of Finance and an Emeritus Professor at the Daniels College of Business at the University of Denver. She has worked extensively as a research consultant and investment advisor for institutional investors and wealth managers in quantitative methods and portfolio construction. She taught at the graduate and undergraduate levels and published research in several areas including: capital markets, portfolio management and performance analysis, financial applications of econometrics and the analysis of equity securities. In 2019, Dr. Johnsen published “Smarter Investing” with Palgrave/Macmillan, a top 10 in business book sales for the publisher. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder, with a major field of study in Investments and a minor in Econometrics.Currently, Dr. Johnsen is a consultant to wealthy families/individuals, asset managers, and wealth managers.

Important Disclosures

For informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as specific investment, accounting, legal, or tax advice. Certain information is deemed to be reliable, but its accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. Third party information may become outdated or otherwise superseded without notice. Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) nor any other federal or state agency has approved, determined the accuracy, or confirmed the adequacy of this article.

The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Alpha Architect, its affiliates or its employees. Our full disclosures are availablehere.Definitions of common statistics used in our analysis are availablehere(towards the bottom).

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Is Passive Ownership Bigger than Estimated? (2024)

FAQs

Is Passive Ownership Bigger than Estimated? ›

Our estimates for the US passive-ownership share in Figure 2 are twice as large as previously thought. Investment Company Institute (2022, ICI) reports that index funds collectively held 16% of the US stock market in 2021. We put the true passive-ownership share at 33. 3% in 2021.

What percentage of the market is passive? ›

Well, there is lumpiness in where the passive share is most prevalent. So while it is just over 50% of the overall market, it might be 30% in some areas and 70% in others. Thus, we can get a sense of early signs of breaking by looking at the areas in which passive share is the highest.

Is passive investing lower or higher? ›

Passive investing is often less expensive than active investing because fund managers are not picking stocks or bonds. Passive funds allow a particular index to guide which securities are traded, which means there is not the added expense of research analysts. Even passively managed funds will charge fees.

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.

What is the difference between active ownership and passive ownership? ›

Active owners may be either short-term or long-term investors, but by their very nature, all passive investors are long-term investors because they cannot disinvest. If passive owners do engage with the companies they invest in, they likely advocate for best long-term practices to align with their time horizon.

How big are passive funds? ›

The total AUM of passive funds stand at close to 7.91 trillion. Equity oriented domestic ETFs at Rs4. 60 trillion, accounted for over 58% of the AUM of all passive funds.

What is the problem with passive investing? ›

These include undesirable concentrations of stocks, systemic risk and buying at too high valuations. Investing passively should not be seen as a low governance 'set-and-forget' option. While it is no panacea, active management can overcome some of these issues.

Is passive investing growing? ›

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.

What is a good passive income percentage? ›

At 10% passive income as a percentage of total income, you've got your savings habits down pat, and you've also got room to grow your passive or semi-passive income streams if you dedicate your time.

Do active funds outperform passive funds? ›

However, when considering a 10-year scope, only 44% of active funds kept above the index and the active average return for 10 years only hit 56.5% while passive reached 60.5%. “While all active fund investors expect outperformance, it's not statistically possible for all managers to outperform,” Khalaf said.

What are the cons of passive real estate investing? ›

Less capital gains tax in the short term. Cons of passive real estate investments: Less profitability than active real estate investments. Less control over how the asset is managed.

Is passive investing high risk? ›

Lower Risk: Passive investing can lower risk, because you're investing in a broad mix of asset classes and industries, as opposed to relying on the performance of individual stock.

What is the return goal for passive investing? ›

Passive investing using an index fund avoids the analysis of individual stocks and trading in and out of the market. The goal of these passive investors is to get the index's return, rather than trying to outpace the index.

Is it better to be an active or passive investor? ›

For example, when the market is volatile or the economy is weakening, active managers may outperform more often than when it is not. Conversely, when specific securities within the market are moving in unison or equity valuations are more uniform, passive strategies may be the better way to go.

Why is passive investing better than active? ›

So passive funds typically have lower expense ratios, or the annual cost to own a piece of the fund. Those lower costs are another factor in the better returns for passive investors. Funds built on the S&P 500 index, which mostly tracks the largest American companies, are among the most popular passive investments.

What is the key strategy of passive investing? ›

One of the main tenets of passive investing is the maintenance of long-term holdings. Because there's very infrequent buying and selling, fees are low. In short, you'll lose less of your returns to management. ETFs and mutual funds are staples of passive investing portfolios.

What is the passive to active ratio? ›

Your Passive to Active Ratio is the amount of passive income you have coming in each month compared to the active income you have each month. Passive income is income that you don't have to trade your time for – money made while you sleep. A good example of this is rental income.

What percent of active traders beat the market? ›

Research: 89% of fund managers fail to beat the market

According to this report, 88.99% of large-cap US funds have underperformed the S&P500 index over ten years. As a whole, 78–97% of actively managed stock funds failed to beat the indexes they were benchmarked against over ten years.

What is the average passive income? ›

According to the US Census Bureau, 20% of American households earn passive income, with the median earnings sitting at around $4,200 (£3,390) a year, and estimates suggest that around 36% of millennials already make passive income of some kind.

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