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Hybrid Investing: A Fresh Take on Portfolio Management for Retail Investors

By
Alexander Harmsen
Alexander Harmsen is the Co-founder and CEO of PortfolioPilot. With a track record of building AI-driven products that have scaled globally, he brings deep expertise in finance, technology, and strategy to create content that is both data-driven and actionable.
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PortfolioPilot Compliance Team
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Hybrid Investing: A Fresh Take on Portfolio Management for Retail Investors

As investors, we’ve attempted to fit ourselves into one of the two primary investment styles - active and passive. While both have pros and cons (discussed here), there is still much left to desire from both. Over the past several decades, conventional wisdom that investors could not beat an efficient market led to the rise of index mutual funds and then the boom of ETFs, and newer offerings such as robo-advisors have made constructing passive portfolios even easier and more tax-efficient; however, our view is that strict passivity leaves personalization and better returns on the table.

That is why we believe there is a sweet spot between active and passive portfolio management, which we call Hybrid Investing. Let’s dive in.

What is hybrid investing?

Hybrid investing is an evolution of portfolio management that is meant to combine the best of active and passive styles. Its primary focus is on building a solid diversified base portfolio with a high risk-adjusted expected return. On top of that, with the right insights, there is a tremendous opportunity to anticipate medium-term macro trends and incorporate those insights into an investment strategy while maintaining a mostly macro-neutral portfolio

Besides the lack of time and expertise, one of the primary reasons self-directed investors choose to passively manage their investments is assuming that over long periods of time, assets have positive returns. The downside is that by simply adopting this principle alone, they miss out on shorter-term opportunities that come from macroeconomic changes.

Though it might seem less risky to just let your investments sit, holding onto assets such as cash, bonds, and index funds, Hybrid Investing takes into consideration two important components in its attempt to achieve better risk-adjusted returns:

  1. Building a solid core of assets that are more thoroughly diversified than the average portfolio on account of neutralizing the impact of fundamental economic drivers
  2. Introducing a tilt in your portfolio to try to capture the upside of outsized returns caused by shifting economic conditions

At its core, it’s simply about being thoughtful regarding exposure. While any particular asset will have a myriad of exposures, these exposures can be balanced out across a portfolio by holding certain securities in relation to one another. For example, for any one security, inflation exposure may not matter as much as other factors, but because you hold a portfolio as a whole, the aggregated inflation exposure could represent a massive risk. Ideally, for every possible macro environment, you want more up than down.

This is the natural next step up from the traditional self-directed investor approach to diversification that spreads your assets into multiple categories, including asset class (stocks, bonds, commodities, real estate, etc.), sector (healthcare, tech, energy, etc.), and country. While roughly allocating across these categories allows for some diversification, you absolutely lose out on opportunities when not measuring your actual exposure to the underlying drivers and balancing them in a calculated fashion.

As an everyday investor, you might be asking why this is the first that you are hearing about this approach. It’s not new and is something in practice by the savviest professional money managers.

The only change is that now self-directed investors can take advantage of this Hybrid Investing style because of access to professional tools and data that have been historically only available to hedge funds and large institutions. Having the ability to understand how your portfolio is affected by macro drivers and adjusting it accordingly increases your opportunity to take advantage of medium-term trends and be protected against unexpected downturns. The truth is that while small-scale or individual-stock trades can seem random or, at the very least impossible to capitalize on more quickly than the experts, macroeconomic conditions trend over time and exist in markets large enough for many investors to benefit.

Like passive investing, hybrid investing is low-touch and allows investors to make small periodical adjustments every month or quarter and can be implemented with either funds or hand-selected securities. We believe that making these periodic adjustments will allow you to take advantage of medium-term macro trends, contributing to greater expected returns, and doesn’t necessarily involve taking on any more risk than you’re already taking.

Happy investing!

Hybrid Investing FAQs

What market belief fueled the rise of index funds and ETFs over past decades?
Conventional wisdom held that investors could not consistently beat efficient markets. This view led to the growth of index mutual funds and later ETFs, with robo-advisors making passive portfolios more accessible and tax-efficient.
How does hybrid investing differ from strict passivity?
Hybrid investing blends passive diversification with active tilts, seeking to capture medium-term macroeconomic opportunities while maintaining a mostly macro-neutral base. Strict passivity avoids these tactical adjustments, potentially leaving personalization and returns on the table.
What two core components define hybrid investing according to the article?
The approach builds a thoroughly diversified base portfolio that neutralizes exposure to fundamental economic drivers, then adds targeted tilts to capture potential upside from shifting economic conditions.
Why might holding only cash, bonds, and index funds miss opportunities?
While low-risk on the surface, this passive approach can overlook gains from medium-term macro shifts, which hybrid investing seeks to capture without necessarily increasing overall portfolio risk.
How can aggregated inflation exposure create hidden risks?
A single asset’s inflation sensitivity may seem minimal, but across a portfolio, exposures can compound, creating a large inflation-driven risk if not balanced with offsetting securities.
How does hybrid investing expand on traditional diversification by asset class, sector, or country?
Instead of only spreading across categories, it measures actual exposure to underlying economic drivers, balancing them in a calculated fashion to better insulate against systemic risks.
Who historically practiced hybrid-style investing before it became available to individuals?
The approach has long been used by professional money managers and hedge funds, but only recently have tools and data made it accessible to self-directed investors.
Why are macroeconomic conditions considered investable trends in hybrid investing?
Unlike individual stock movements, macroeconomic drivers—such as inflation or liquidity shifts—tend to persist over time and impact large, liquid markets, making them actionable for investors.
How often does the article suggest adjustments in hybrid investing should be made?
Hybrid investing is described as low-touch, with investors making small, periodic adjustments monthly or quarterly to capture medium-term macro trends.
Can hybrid investing be implemented using funds as well as individual securities?
Yes. The approach works with either index funds and ETFs or hand-selected securities, as long as portfolio exposures are measured and balanced across macroeconomic drivers.

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1: As of February 20, 2025