Why Artificial Intelligence Has Failed to Outperform

New research has documented the persistent failure of investing based on artificial intelligence (AI). This is unsurprising, given the challenges of active management and the widespread inadequacy of humans to outperform an index fund.

With all the hype around AI, I’ve been getting questions about whether it might outperform benchmark indices – something human active managers have persistently failed to accomplish. According to BlackRock CEO Laurence Fink, the likely reason for the relative underperformance of active equity funds and the resulting outflows is the fallacies inherent in human discretion in active portfolio management and stock‐picking. According to Fink, “the democratization of information has made it much harder for active management. We have to change the ecosystem – that means relying more on big data, AI, factors and models within quant and traditional investment strategies.” BlackRock executive Mark Wiseman added, “The old way of people sitting in a room picking stocks, thinking they are smarter than the next guy – that does not exist anymore.” Kiplinger provided another example of the hype (and hope) surrounding AI: “Artificial intelligence leveraging the raw power of Big Data might just be the edge tactical investors and traders need to navigate an increasingly uncertain market.”