Pillar 1: The rise of passive: Structural appeal through simplicity
Passive investing has transformed core equity. It remains structurally attractive because it:
- Delivers broad market exposure efficiently and quickly.
- Has been, and may continue to be, rewarded in a post-GFC regime as falling market breadth and an extended cycle has challenged some active managers.
- Simplifies oversight, with fewer manager decisions, transparent exposures, and low headline fees.
But passive is not always risk-free. Certain implementation techniques (sampling/optimisation) can create non-trivial tracking differences, and market-cap weighting can concentrate exposure in the market’s winners – amplifying momentum, valuation, and thematic concentration. Passive follows leadership until it changes; it does not re-balance away from crowded outcomes on its own.
Pillar 2: The quantitative role: Breadth and risk discipline
Quantitative equity has become a natural core complement to passive.
Quant can be highly scalable and customisable for allocator constraints. It tends to be valued because it offers:
- Systematic breadth: diversified alpha across many signals, stocks, and sectors/regions.
- Portfolio risk control: explicit constraints, repeatability, and disciplined implementation.
- Participation in supportive environments: the ability to harvest small edges efficiently when signals work.
Like any style, quant can face periods of headwind when common exposures are crowded or when historical relationships are disrupted. That is not unique to systematic strategies – discretionary portfolios can crowd into similar factor and positioning risks as well. The practical lesson is not to replace quant, but to embrace its role and pair it with a genuinely different alpha engine.
Pillar 3: Enter disciplined fundamental core: Intentional idiosyncratic risk
For many allocators, traditional "core" fundamental strategies have been an uneven building block. Common pain points include:
- Style and factor drift (cyclical behaviour that surprises when a strategy is expected to be neutral).
- Tracking risk that moves outside the range assumed in portfolio construction.
- Rigid structures that make benchmark alignment, exclusions, and risk objectives hard to implement.
- The potential to take the “wrong kind” of uncompensated risk (e.g., underweight mega cap names) rather than risk that is associated with the manager’s edge (or compensated risk).
Disciplined fundamental core strategies address these issues by starting with the core mandate - benchmark alignment and risk profile – and then harvesting stock-specific alpha inside that frame. The defining characteristics are consistent with a true core building block:
- Market-like beta (approximately 1.0).
- Modest tracking error (typically below 4% p.a.).
- A high share of idiosyncratic risk (predominantly stock-specific, not factor tilts).
The advantage fundamental brings is not "more active risk" – it is different active risk: bottom-up, explainable decisions that can behave differently when systematic factors are under stress.
Why is this important from an allocator’s perspective? The real challenge with traditional fundamental core equity strategies has been less about sourcing alpha and more about governing how it is delivered. In many instances – particularly in open architecture allocator frameworks – three key decisions don’t always speak well to one another: security selection, portfolio construction, and allocator-level portfolio design. The investment manager naturally prioritises stock selection, with portfolio construction often treated as a secondary concern. The allocator is left with an imperfect building block and the need to optimise exposures after the fact.
A more robust model is to design alpha and risk together: draw on fundamental insights (potentially from multiple sources) while expressing them through a single, disciplined portfolio-construction framework that stays true to the benchmark and the allocator’s constraints. Where an off-the-shelf strategy achieves this, it can be a clean solution; where it doesn’t – because of customisation needs, capacity, or cost – an integrated, tailored implementation becomes the practical alternative.
Practical approaches to disciplined fundamental core
Disciplined fundamental core can be implemented in several ways, depending on governance, complexity tolerance, and objectives:
- Integrated long-only core: managed directly against the allocator’s benchmark with disciplined risk constraints and stock-specific conviction.
- Disciplined extended core (e.g., 130/30): the same integrated process, with controlled leverage/shorting to expand the opportunity set while keeping a core footprint.
- Portable fundamental alpha: separates alpha and beta, keeping index exposure via overlays while sourcing idiosyncratic excess returns from less efficient market segments.
- Alpha capture: an integrated, risk-managed “best-ideas” portfolio that extracts and reassembles highest-conviction fundamental insights from multiple managers into one benchmark-aware, tightly risk-controlled (and customisable) core implementation.
Across all these options, the real differentiator is not the toolset itself but the degree of integration: how well aligned the alpha engine is with the allocator’s benchmark, exclusions, and risk budget via disciplined portfolio construction. Underpinning all of this is a focus on risk as an objective, not an outcome.
Practical advice for allocators: What changes when you blend quant and fundamental?
Analysis of the last 15 years across global equity "core" strategies reinforces a consistent result: active quant and fundamental behave like different alpha engines even inside a tight risk budget. Blending the two can improve outcomes without requiring a change in the 'core' risk label.