This is the most researched question in investing — and the answer from 40+ years of data is unambiguous enough that even most professional investors privately acknowledge it.
The SPIVA report findings (S&P Dow Jones, 2026)
- Over 1 year: 55–65% of active US large-cap funds underperformed the S&P 500
- Over 5 years: 75–80% underperformed
- Over 15 years: 85–92% underperformed
- Over 20 years: 90–95% underperformed
The longer the time horizon, the worse active funds look. This isn't a fluke — it reflects a structural math problem.
Why active funds structurally can't win
The zero-sum reality: for every investor who outperforms the market, another underperforms by the same amount. After fees (0.5–1.2% for active vs 0.03% for index funds), the aggregate active manager must underperform the index. William Sharpe's arithmetic of active management: before costs, average active manager equals the market. After costs: average active manager underperforms by exactly the fee amount.
The 5–10% that do outperform: can you pick them?
Studies show that past outperformance predicts future outperformance only marginally better than random chance. Morningstar's research: the top quartile of active funds in one 5-year period becomes median performers in the next 5-year period at about the rate expected by random selection.
When active funds might make sense
- Niche markets where information is less efficient (micro-cap, emerging markets, specific bond sectors)
- Where your 401(k) plan has no low-cost index option (choose lowest-cost active fund available)
- Tax-managed active strategies in taxable accounts with very specific TLH implementation
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About the author

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.
- Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
- Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
- AI and ITIL certifications
- 15+ years in regulated financial services
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