Active Strategy vs Passive Strategy

An active investment strategy tries to earn higher returns by identifying mispriced securities. Active investors believe that some securities are undervalued or overvalued and try to profit from these pricing errors.

A passive investment strategy does not try to beat the market. Instead, it focuses on holding a diversified portfolio for the long term, usually at a lower cost.

In efficient markets, passive strategies are often preferred because prices already reflect information. Active strategies may not generate enough extra return after considering costs.

Example:
Suppose an active fund gives a return of 13% in one year. A passive index fund gives a return of 12% in the same year.

However, the active fund charges 2% as management fees, while the index fund charges only 0.3%.

After costs:

Active fund return = 13% – 2% = 11%
Passive fund return = 12% – 0.3% = 11.7%

Even though the active fund performed better before costs, the passive fund gave a better return after costs.

This is why cost plays an important role in market efficiency and investment strategy.

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