In this edition...
- The future is bright for financial advice… but it will be a bumpy ride James Goad, Managing Director - Owen James
- Trump, tariffs, tech, and the rest of the world Fabian Wiesner, Head of Distribution Partnerships - Simplybiz
- Infrastructure: The UK’s untapped goldmine for investors? Katie Sykes, Client Engagement & Marketing Manager - RSMR
- The regulatory landscape for 2025 Sandy McGregor, Director of Policy - Simplybiz
- Can active and passive team up for investment success? Nick Millington, Head of Systematic Index Solutions - Aberdeen Investments
- Why your back-office tech should be invisible Abi Hortin, Implementation Specialist - Plannr Technologies Limited
- 2025 Planning and beyond… Scarlet Musson, Business Development Director - APS Legal Associates
- Marking 10 years of Multi-Asset Income BNY Investments,
- Trump, hitting the ground running Jonathan Griffiths, CFA Investment Product Manager - ebi Portfolios
- Weak UK outlook calls for nuanced approach Caroline Shaw, Portfolio Manager - Fidelity International
- Managing CGT through unitised funds Antony Champion, Managing Director, Head of Intermediaries - RBC Brewin Dolphin
- Expanding Decumulation Capabilities in Pathways Seb Marshall, Product Manager - Synaptic
- DFM due diligence and the role of financial strength consideration Matt Ward, Communications Director - AKG Financial Analytics Ltd
- Benefits of Investing on Global Listed Infrastructure Giuseppe Corona, Head of Listed Real Assets - HSBC Asset Management
- Taking stock of the new world order Ariel Bazalel, Investment Manager - Jupiter Strategic Bond Fund
Enhanced indexation blends cost-efficient quantitative rigour with active alpha potential.
In recent years, some advisers and clients have fallen out of love with active investing and moved their investments into passive strategies.
The active/passive debate is, of course, a long-running one. Both approaches have their merits. You’re unlikely to outperform the market if you replicate the index. But on the other hand, if you want to avoid underperforming the market, then investing in an index could be a good idea. Especially if you’re looking to minimise costs.
Best of both worlds?
However, we believe active and passive don’t have to be rivals. In fact, they can be combined, potentially offering your clients the best of both worlds.
One option is to mix active and passive strategies in a portfolio. But there’s another way to alloy the attributes of these two contrasting investment approaches into one cost-effective allocation. It’s called enhanced indexation.
Compelling combinations
Enhanced indexation is a systematic equity strategy combining the benefits of both active and passive. An enhanced index strategy has the potential for outperformance at competitive cost. It’s also highly diversified.
The index is our starting point for our investment process. We aim to improve upon it by incorporating various factors that differentiate companies with positive and negative future prospects.
Factors are common themes or attributes that drive risk and return.
We think the three factors that are key to future outperformance are:
- Quality
- Momentum
- Value
Quality measures how well companies use their capital. Companies with momentum are essentially those the market likes. Value is a factor that keeps us from overpaying for the combination of quality and momentum. In aggregate, this means we prefer well-managed companies at reasonable valuations preferred by market participants.
It’s hard to predict exactly when quality, momentum or value are going to have a great year. We believe they’ll all perform well over the long run, but each will perform well at different points in the cycle. This means enhanced index investors benefit from diversification of return drivers in addition to diversification across stocks, sectors and regions.
However, assessing companies is just the beginning. We need a disciplined, repeatable process to create a portfolio that continuously benefits from these attributes. We assess the multifactor characteristics of each and every stock in the index.
1. We start with the weight of a company in the benchmark and buy more of what we like and less of what we don’t like.
2. We want our performance to be driven by Quality, Momentum and Value. So we control for sector risk, stock risk and country risk.
3. For the same reason, we also neutralise against dynamic risks and themes (think inflation, elections, wars, and even things like AI - we want to avoid drifting into concentrated positions).
4. We monitor the stocks in the index and update our positions as multi-factor scores, risks and themes change. 5. We continuously check that our portfolio risks and returns are driven by our preferred factors (quality, value and momentum) and adjust the portfolio if required.
We apply this strategy across 7 regions:
Aberdeen Investments Enhanced Index Equity Strategies

"A key point about enhanced index strategies is that they’re cost-efficient and therefore potentially represent good value for money."
Cost-efficiency
Why are enhanced index strategies becoming increasingly popular with advisers?
A key point about enhanced index strategies is that they’re cost-efficient and therefore potentially represent good value for money. Customers can use them as inexpensive core equity building blocks in multi-asset solutions.
Any remaining fee budget can then be allocated to complementary satellite strategies - everything from small-cap growth to infrastructure to real estate and everything in between.
Conclusion
An enhanced index strategy blends the benefits of cost-effective quantitative rigour with active outperformance potential.
Important information: The value of investments, and the income from them, can go down as well as up and an investor may get back less than the amount invested. Past performance is not a guide to future results.
Before investing, investors should consider carefully the investment objective, risks, charges, and expenses of a fund. This and other important information is contained in the prospectus and KIID document. The information is intended to be of general interest only and should not be considered as an offer, investment recommendation or solicitation, to deal in the shares of any securities or financial instruments.
United Kingdom (UK): abrdn Investment Management Limited registered in Scotland (SC123321) at 1 George Street, Edinburgh EH2 2LL. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK.
Copyright © Aberdeen Group plc 2025. All rights reserved.
Get in touch:
Visit www.aberdeeninvestments.com/intermediary
For more information contact: Dave Fewtrell, Head of UK Retail dave.fewtrell@abrdn.com.
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