
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The debate about the level of small company exposure in a portfolio has typically revolved around an assessment of their characteristics relative to large caps. However, an asset allocation decision based purely on analysis of the respective benchmark returns ignores the demonstrated alpha opportunity available for active investors over time. The cross-sectional volatility of small companies is materially higher than the S&P/ASX 100. The higher the dispersion of returns, the higher the opportunity to add value. Historically, active management has consistently delivered outperformance in small companies as the opportunity set presented by the sector allows portfolio managers to demonstrate both stock selection skill and portfolio construction skill. - Andrew Mouchacca, Flinders Investment Partners. Earn 0.25 CE/CPD hrs on Portfolio Construction Forum
By Portfolio Construction ForumThe debate about the level of small company exposure in a portfolio has typically revolved around an assessment of their characteristics relative to large caps. However, an asset allocation decision based purely on analysis of the respective benchmark returns ignores the demonstrated alpha opportunity available for active investors over time. The cross-sectional volatility of small companies is materially higher than the S&P/ASX 100. The higher the dispersion of returns, the higher the opportunity to add value. Historically, active management has consistently delivered outperformance in small companies as the opportunity set presented by the sector allows portfolio managers to demonstrate both stock selection skill and portfolio construction skill. - Andrew Mouchacca, Flinders Investment Partners. Earn 0.25 CE/CPD hrs on Portfolio Construction Forum