February 2026, From the Field
Modest fees and more than a decade of strong market returns have made passive strategies that track large‑cap equity indexes simple and increasingly common building blocks for the core of a diversified investment portfolio.
But passive exposure to the broader market comes at an opportunity cost: alpha, or potential outperformance relative to the benchmark.
How can investors get more from their portfolio’s core while accounting for risk and expense budgets?
A well‑designed active-core strategy could help clients use portfolio capital more efficiently by adding the potential for consistent, risk‑adjusted alpha.
The core/satellite approach to equity portfolio construction has become a common structure for investors to help balance expense and risk budgets as they pursue long‑term financial objectives.
Within this framework (Figure 1), the core typically consists of a strategic mix of passive funds that offer the prospect of a low‑cost, market‑like return. As the largest part of the portfolio, the core aims to limit fee‑related performance drag while alleviating the challenge of picking the right active manager. It also avoids the potential for subpar returns versus a benchmark. Satellite strategies orbiting this core take more active risk in the pursuit of stronger outperformance.
For illustrative purposes only.
As passive‑core exposures have grown, so has the opportunity to use this portfolio capital more effectively. Producing even a modest excess return from a core allocation can make a significant difference to an investor’s long‑term outcome.
Our analysis, for example, suggests that an additional 25 basis points (bps) in return over 40 years of savings could result in an additional two years of retirement spending. Increasing the excess return to 50 basis points could add five additional years of spending (Figure 2).
Demographic Assumptions |
Scenario Assumptions |
Baseline |
+25 BPS |
+50 BPS |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Starting Balance |
USD 0 |
Returns Before 65 |
7.00% |
7.25% |
7.50% |
Starting Age |
25 |
Returns After 65 |
5.00% |
5.25% |
5.50% |
Starting Salary |
USD 30,000 |
Account Balance at 65 |
USD 845,930 |
USD 897,859 |
USD 953,452 |
Annual Salary Growth Rate |
3% |
Withdrawal (% of Ending Salary) |
50% |
50% |
50% |
Annual Contribution Rate |
9% |
Annual Withdrawal Amount |
USD 48,931 |
USD 48,931 |
USD 48,931 |
Retirement Age |
65 |
Withdrawal Increase |
3% |
3% |
3% |
Ending Salary |
USD 97,861 |
|
|
|
|
The results shown above are hypothetical, do not reflect actual investment results, and are not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future results.
Hypothetical results were developed with the benefit of hindsight and have inherent limitations. Hypothetical results do not reflect actual trading or the effect of material economic and market factors on the decision-making process. Results do not include the impact of fees, expenses, or taxes. Results have been adjusted to reflect the reinvestment of dividend and capital gains. Actual returns may differ significantly from the results shown.
The demographic assumptions, returns, and ending balances are shown for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to provide any assurance or promise of actual returns and outcomes. One basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
Source: T. Rowe Price.
In this instance, the frequency of outperformance is key to compounding value. When applied to such a large base of portfolio capital over longer time frames, the prospect of generating steady, if not necessarily heady, excess returns can be very compelling.
Clients who want to get more from their portfolio’s core can choose from a small but growing universe of active-core strategies that seek to integrate the best attributes of active and passive investing:
1. Alpha potential: An active and repeatable investment process is built on a source of edge/insight that creates the potential for excess returns across different market environments.
2. Controlled, but active risk: Targeting 50 to 100 basis points in tracking error can help with consistency versus a benchmark and to minimize exposure to factor hot spots. It also has the potential to reduce the risk of underperforming the benchmark by a wide margin.
3. Competitive fees: An affordable expense ratio lowers the drag on potential returns.
For prospective investors, the critical question is whether the underlying investment engine can consistently generate benchmark‑plus returns with minimal active risk.
Markets are dynamic and continually evolve. But recurring behavioral biases can lead to persistent market inefficiencies.
We believe an investment engine that integrates two distinct but complementary sources of insight—deep fundamental research and rigorous quantitative analysis—should be well positioned to take advantage of these inefficiencies in the pursuit of consistent, risk‑adjusted alpha.
With this design, performance isn’t the result of a single lens or philosophy but rather two independent investment approaches that can be even more powerful when combined.
Thoughtfully integrating fundamental and quantitative analysis helps to reduce blind spots, challenge assumptions, and improve investment decision‑making across market cycles.
Low-tracking-error strategies seek to provide a similar risk profile to the benchmark while allowing diversified stock picking to drive relative returns.
By design, these products don’t make large, concentrated bets. Instead, smaller overweight and underweight positions are spread across a broad universe of securities. The sizes of these active bets, which are tightly controlled to limit tracking error, reflect the level of confidence in the investment thesis.
For a strategy that systematically integrates fundamental and quantitative analysis, conviction could reflect the convergence of the two approaches:
When only a quantitative rating is available, the hurdle for making a meaningful active bet in a stock should be higher.
Limiting position sizes is only one way to limit tracking error. Guarding against unintended risks or style biases in the portfolio is also critical.
Managers backed by strong fundamental research and quantitative teams may be better positioned to spot and adjust to evolving risk factors where clusters of stocks start to trade in a similar manner. Some of these correlations can be related to macroeconomic developments, such as the direction of interest rates or where a company generates its earnings. In other instances, dislocations may emerge in companies with negative earnings or groups of stocks that offer exposure to popular themes, such as AI, nuclear power, or space technology.
Balancing individual alpha opportunities with top‑down risk management requires constant vigilance.
A strategy that has the potential to generate excess returns consistently without taking on too much tracking error can create material advantages as a core portfolio holding.
Evaluating the people and process is critical to identifying solutions with the potential to deliver above-benchmark returns with benchmark-like risk. We believe that well‑designed active-core strategies that combine human and machine insights—two distinct sources of potential alpha—should be well positioned to compound long‑term value.
A global asset manager with demonstrated fundamental and quantitative investment capabilities should have an advantage in creating core strategies that meet clients’ needs for potential returns, risk, and cost—think of this as smarter alpha.
Feb 2026
From the Field
Investment Risks:
Quantitative models: Relying on quantitative models and the analysis of specific metrics in constructing a portfolio could cause an investor to be unsuccessful in selecting companies for investment or determining the weighting of particular stocks in the portfolio.
Fundamental approach: There is risk that an active manager may make a wrong call regarding a particular security or sector.
Active investing may have higher costs than passive investing and may underperform the broad market or passive peers with similar objectives.
Passive investing may lag the performance of actively managed peers as holdings are not reallocated based on changes in market conditions or outlooks on specific securities.
Diversification cannot assure a profit or protect against loss in a declining market.
There is no assurance that any investment objective will be achieved.
Financial Terms Definitions:
Tracking error is the divergence between the price behavior of an investment and an index.
Alpha is the excess return of an investment relative to its benchmark. Positive alpha means outperformance of an investment relative to its benchmark.
Active risk is risk is the relative risk incurred by deviating from a benchmark in the pursuit of higher returns.
Factors or factor analysis is an investment approach that involves targeting quantifiable firm characteristics or “factors” that can explain differences in stock returns. Over the last 50 years, academic research has identified hundreds of factors that impact stock returns.
Visit troweprice.com/glossary for definitions of additional financial terms.
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