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by asdfasgasdgasdg 1942 days ago
The average active manager who mostly uses stocks in the S&P 500 matches the S&P 500, before fees, almost by definition. Given that the vast majority of passive investment is approximately tracking the S&P 500, active managers -- the complement of the passive set -- must also have the same average. The only way active managers could average something substantially different is if passive investments underperformed or overperformed, neither of which are the case.
1 comments

Most funds end up so large that they can’t help but to be basically the s&p 500, just with slightly different weightings.

To majorly out perform or underperform you have to be drastically different.