Closet Indexing

We picture a portfolio manager diligently researching stocks and other securities and making purchases that are going to provide the best possible returns. In exchange for all this hard work, they are rewarded with management fees paid by clients.

But some portfolio managers take the “easy” way out, or they want to use something more reliable than their own best judgment, so they turn to closet indexing. Just like hiding in a closet or doing something behind closed doors, the portfolio manager claims to be purchasing a variety of investments, but is really going along with an underlying benchmark index such as the S&P 500. Kind of like those whose March Madness brackets are almost identical to what’s published in Sports Illustrated.

Perhaps the reason some managers resort to this is they’ve had several years of poor results and don’t want their company or their clients to lose confidence in their abilities. Portfolio managers are also fiercely competing with “passive management,” where the portfolio matches a market index, known as index funds. Active management funds almost always underperform passive management ones, because they need to achieve a higher return to make up for their higher management fees and trading costs.

So it’s no wonder that portfolio managers turn to closet indexing. But investors are not too happy to find out closet indexing has been going on since they have been paying higher fees, when they could have just invested in an index fund. There is tracking software that measures the percentage of holdings in a fund’s portfolio that differs from the fund’s benchmark index. Called “active share,” if a portfolio has between 20% and 60% that is different, it is believed to be a closet indexer.

In 2018, the New York Attorney General reached an agreement with 13 major fund firms to voluntarily disclose how much closet indexing they do and how much they actively manage their equity funds. Each firm will now come out of the closet and post on their website the active share of funds on a quarterly basis.

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Finance: What is Closet Indexing?0 Views

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literal closet, closet indexing is a financial strategy that professional

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them closet index are you.. most investment managers performance is

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pegged to a given investment index like the S&P 500 or the Russell 2000 or the

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30-year US government paper so if a manager was indexing to the Dow Jones

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average well, they'd note the 30 stocks in it like

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these...... and their closet [List of Dow 30 stocks]

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indexed portfolio would just riff off the stocks in the rough weighting

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amounts that comprise the Dow like here's Microsoft but they might have in

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their portfolio a tenth of a percent more in Microsoft than is in the Dow

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index because they are slightly less bearish about the future prospects of

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the once-great company you know then the rest of the street has and they might [People purchasing stocks]

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have a bit less oil because well they drive a Tesla and they think everyone

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well they just should and by keeping their portfolio very close to their

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going along collecting their salaries and they live to you know dress another

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day... [Girl trying on clothes and man walks by]

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