Most independent RIAs don't need convincing that momentum works. The research spans 150 years and 46 countries. But once you've decided to allocate to momentum, a different question emerges: Is a static index methodology the best way to implement a dynamic factor?
The conversation shifts to implementation: How frequently should leadership be reassessed? Should exposure remain fully invested through prolonged downtrends? Does diversification enhance or dilute factor expression?
This is where the distinction between passive and systematic active momentum becomes meaningful.
Passive momentum ETFs provide transparent rules, broad diversification, lower costs, and predictable rebalance schedules. This aligns well with factor-based portfolio construction.
But index construction comes with constraints:
MTUM completely rebalances twice per year. Between those dates, the portfolio holds whatever was selected at the last reconstitution.
Passive momentum is disciplined but not designed to adapt between rebalance windows or manage equity regime risk.
Key Point: Passive momentum ETFs offer discipline and transparency but lack the flexibility to adapt between rebalance windows or manage regime risk.
Momentum captures persistent trends in supply and demand, including downtrends.
Passive momentum ETFs excel at capturing upward trends. But when markets enter protracted corrective periods, those same funds ride momentum downward with no mechanism to protect capital.
Momentum strategies face maximum drawdowns as large as -88%. From June to August 1932, momentum portfolios lost about 91%. In 2009, momentum lost more than 73% within three months.
The 2025 tariff tantrum provides a recent example. Passive momentum funds descended alongside the broader market during March and April corrections.
Key Point: Momentum captures trends in both directions, and passive implementations have no mechanism to protect capital during prolonged downtrends.
The question is whether structural differences meaningfully impact outcomes across bull and bear markets.
Momentum leadership rotates quickly. Weekly reconstitution responds faster to emerging leaders and removes deteriorating names more quickly, reducing quarterly reset lag.
The tradeoff is greater tracking variance, but you potentially get more precise factor exposure. Rebalance frequency represents a fundamental structural choice.
Many passive momentum ETFs hold 100-400 stocks, reducing single-name risk but diluting high-conviction positioning.
If you're holding both A students and F students, you're getting a C average. Passive diversification means your outperformers get averaged with your underperformers.
A concentrated portfolio of top-ranked names expresses momentum more directly. In uptrends, you might carry higher daily beta, but focusing on A and B stocks can generate larger returns over time.
This is the most significant structural difference. Passive momentum ETFs remain fully invested through bear markets and high-volatility regime shifts.
A systematic active approach can embed a predefined regime filter, a rules-based trend signal that shifts exposure to short-term Treasuries or cash during broad market downtrends. This isn't discretionary market timing. It's a rules-driven mechanism designed to reduce time spent in prolonged equity drawdowns.
The system uses a 5-day moving average and a 200-day moving average of the broad market. When the 5-day moves below the 200-day on a Friday, the strategy shifts to T-bills and cash. When the 5-day moves above the 200-day, it returns to stocks.
Individual stocks face an additional filter: each holding must trade above its 200-day moving average. If a stock closes below its 200-day on a Friday, it's eliminated.
During the 2025 tariff tantrum, this mechanism kept the strategy flat while the broader market continued correcting, reducing drawdowns and keeping investors participating.
Research supports this approach. Studies show that risk management virtually eliminated crashes and nearly doubled the Sharpe ratio of momentum strategies.
Key Point: Reconstitution frequency, concentration, and regime awareness are the three structural differences that most impact full-cycle momentum outcomes.
When the regime filter shifts to cash and T-bills, you don't have to sell the ETF itself. The portfolio management happens inside the fund wrapper, so you're not incurring capital gains at the individual investor level. Tax is deferred. Capital gains aren't triggered.
It becomes a trophy position. Clients can hold while the strategy actively manages risk beneath the surface. Reducing drawdowns keeps investors participating, a behavioral advantage that compounds over time.
Key Point: The ETF wrapper defers capital gains even when the strategy shifts to cash, creating a tax-efficient trophy position for clients.
Think screwdriver versus drill. The screwdriver costs less, but will it get the same job done? The relevant comparison is whether structural differences justify the fee across full market cycles.
Key Point: Rules-based regime filters remove discretion, and the relevant cost comparison is whether structural differences justify the fee across full cycles.
Momentum is compelling in theoretical portfolios. But live results fall short of theoretical returns. Historically, momentum funds have failed to beat the market on average, even during periods when momentum factor portfolios delivered outstanding performance.
Thoughtful implementation and careful sell discipline can narrow the gap. This explains why fee conversations miss the point. The question is whether implementation architecture delivers materially different outcomes.
Key Point: The gap between theoretical and live momentum returns makes implementation architecture more important than fee comparisons.
RIAs are deploying systematic active momentum as a replacement for indexed strategies, passive momentum exposure, or single stock selection sleeves, creating various integration points.
It's about evaluating whether dynamic factor implementation offers incremental advantages over static approaches.
Key Point: Systematic active momentum can replace indexed strategies, passive momentum, or stock selection sleeves depending on portfolio construction goals.
The largest performance gaps appear during market corrections. When the active strategy shifts into protection mode with T-bills and cash, the portfolio stays flat while passive momentum funds continue moving to the downside.
That's where you see the advantage. Not in uptrends where both approaches capture momentum, but in downtrends where structural differences create divergent outcomes.
Key Point: The largest performance gap between active and passive momentum appears during corrections, not uptrends.
If you believe in momentum, the debate becomes practical:
- Static rebalance schedules vs. ongoing reconstitution
- Broad diversification vs. concentrated conviction
- Fully invested exposure vs. regime-aware defense
- Lower fees vs. structural adaptability
Momentum is dynamic by nature. Your implementation can be static or adaptive.
Key Point: The real question is whether your momentum implementation is built to match the dynamic nature of the factor itself.
Do I have a way to manage risk with momentum? If you don't, why not?
Can I explain to my client why I'm in a passive momentum fund beyond just capturing upside? What happens on the downside?
These questions get to the heart of why active strategies exist. Having clear explanations for both market directions matters when clients call during corrections.
Key Point: If you can't explain your downside plan to a client during a correction, your momentum implementation has a gap.
If you're evaluating whether systematic active approaches might enhance portfolio construction:
- Review methodology details
- Examine full-cycle performance
- Compare upside and downside capture metrics
- Assess how regime filters behaved during past transitions
The question isn't whether momentum works, it's whether your implementation is built for full market cycles.
Key Point: Evaluate momentum implementations on full-cycle performance, downside capture, and regime filter behavior, not fees alone.
When the regime filter shifts to cash and T-bills, you don't have to sell the ETF itself. The portfolio management happens inside the fund wrapper, so you're not incurring capital gains at the individual investor level. Tax is deferred. Capital gains aren't triggered.