America’s Best Stock Picker Keeps Beating Passive Funds

For the third time in four years, the stock picker beating everyone is Fidelity Investments Inc.’s decoder of computer chips, crushing every measure of performance as the more popular passively managed index funds tracking market benchmarks proved little more than also-rans in 2024.

He is Adam Benjamin, the 53-year-old who took charge of Boston-based Fidelity’s Select Semiconductors Portfolio mutual fund in 2020 after two decades focusing on the industry that invigorates smartphones, virtual reality headsets, autonomous driving, cloud computing transition, electric vehicles and US national security.

Benjamin is No. 1 for the second consecutive year among 431 US-based mutual or exchange-traded funds investing at least $5 billion over the prior five years, producing a 49% total return in 2024. He led his closest competitor by 4 percentage points and vanquished the S&P 500 Information Technology Index (up 37%), the S&P 500 Index (25%) and the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index (20%), according to data compiled by Bloomberg. His 80% total return in 2023 humbled No. 2 by 5.3 percentage points when the S&P 500 Information Technology Index gained 58%. Benjamin dominated 2021 with a 59.2% total return when the runner-up ETF returned 56.2%. His only setback came in 2022 when the fund declined 35.2%, an outcome that still outperformed most peers.

While financial “experts” routinely assert that low-fee, passive funds tracking various indexes are superior to commission-charging, actively managed funds for long-term investors, data compiled by Bloomberg the past year show otherwise: Nine of the top 10 funds and 16 of the top 20 in 2024 were actively managed even after accounting for fees and other expenses. Six of the 10 leading funds and 11 of the top 20 are in the Fidelity family, which emphasizes selections that can’t be replicated by benchmark funds whose composition changes infrequently.

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