For most of this century, advisors have relied on a barbell portfolio approach to core equity: index funds on one side for low-cost beta, high-conviction active managers on the other for differentiated alpha.
But today’s markets look different. Indexes have grown more concentrated, behaving less like broad market exposure and more like momentum trades in a handful of mega-caps. Meanwhile, many active managers continue to struggle with the risk of style reversals and extended drawdowns, leaving advisors with fewer reliable tools at the center of their portfolios.
The problem isn’t that the barbell has collapsed—it’s that its center has weakened. With rising macro uncertainty and shifting return expectations, advisors need a durable portfolio—one that can align with policy benchmarks without amplifying risk on either end.
That’s where Peregrine Asset Advisers saw an opening. By emphasizing structure over speculation, and implementing a systematic strategy built on diversification and rebalancing, the firm sought to design a core allocation that “holds up through regime shifts” rather than chasing the latest market narrative.
The Fragility of the Barbell
The barbell approach—anchoring portfolios in index funds
while allocating to a few high-conviction active managers—once seemed like the
best of both worlds. Index exposure provided cost efficiency and transparency.
Active managers, when successful, offered the promise of differentiated
returns.
But conditions that supported this balance have eroded:
- Index concentration has intensified. Cap-weighted benchmarks, once considered synonymous with diversification, now derive much of their performance and volatility from a shrinking group of mega-cap names. Instead of providing broad market exposure, these indexes often behave like concentrated bets on momentum.
- Active strategies remain unpredictable. Even seasoned managers face the potential of prolonged drawdowns and sharp style reversals. Allocating with conviction becomes harder when performance swings are tied more to market regimes than to manager skill.
- Macro conditions are less forgiving. With interest rates normalized and liquidity less abundant, both sides of the barbell feel heavier. Indexes carry more concentration risk, while active strategies struggle to justify their idiosyncratic exposures.
As Dan Botti of Peregrine Asset Advisers puts it, “Over thirty years of managing portfolios, I’ve seen what happens when investors rely too heavily on conviction—whether it’s a single manager or a single part of the market. It’s not about calling the next regime shift. It’s about building portfolios that hold up through them.”
“Over thirty years of managing portfolios, I’ve seen what happens when investors rely too heavily on conviction…”
Dan Botti, Principal and Founder, Peregrine Asset Advisers
The lesson for advisors is clear: what once appeared balanced may now amplify vulnerabilities. The barbell no longer delivers the same stability it once promised.
Today’s Narrower Margin for Error
For years, ultra-low rates and abundant liquidity acted as shock absorbers for portfolios. Even when allocations leaned too heavily on concentrated indexes or struggled with inconsistent active managers, the market environment often covered those cracks.
That cushion is gone. In today’s normalized rate environment, the margin for error has narrowed:
- Index-heavy portfolios behave differently. What appears to be diversified exposure can, in practice, resemble a concentrated bet on the same few companies driving benchmark returns.
- Active risk is harder to underwrite. Style drift, regime reversals, and drawdowns weigh on performance just when clients expect consistency.
- Uncertainty magnifies the problem. Geopolitics, inflation risks, and shifting growth expectations increase the likelihood that yesterday’s portfolio construction choices won’t hold tomorrow.
For advisors, the challenge isn’t abandoning passive or rejecting active. It’s recognizing that both sides of the barbell now magnify their weaknesses rather than offset each other. That’s why Peregrine believes it’s time to sharpen the tools at the center of client portfolios, seeking strategies that can remain aligned with benchmarks without replicating their risks.
Peregrine’s Answer to the Challenge
Peregrine Asset Advisers didn’t look to reinvent the wheel. Instead, the firm sought to strengthen the middle of the barbell, anchoring portfolios in a systematic process designed to align with the market while managing its structural risks.
The solution wasn’t to predict the next winner or tilt toward the next popular factor. It was to focus on what rarely goes out of style: structure, diversification, and disciplined rebalancing.
"…instead of choosing between concentration risk and conviction risk, there’s a way to engineer portfolios to manage both."
By implementing an Intech equity strategy grounded in Stochastic Portfolio Theory, Peregrine built a core allocation that behaves differently from both ends of the barbell:
- Aligned with benchmarks, but not dominated by them. The strategy provides broad market exposure while reshaping how risk is distributed across holdings.
- Systematic rebalancing as a return engine. Volatility and dispersion are treated as opportunities to capture trading profit, not risks to suppress.
- Diversification that adapts. Rather than letting cap weight or factor definitions dictate exposures, the process actively refreshes diversification to keep portfolios balanced over time.
“It’s not about calling the next regime shift,” notes Dan Botti. “It’s about building portfolios that hold up through them.”
This perspective reframes the advisor’s challenge: instead of choosing between concentration risk and conviction risk, there’s a way to engineer portfolios to manage both.
Conclusion
The old barbell of passive and active isn’t broken, but its balance has shifted. In an era defined by concentration, volatility, and tighter margins, advisors need a strategy that does more than mimic yesterday’s playbook. Peregrine Asset Advisers shows there is another way: a systematic, disciplined approach that strengthens the middle of the barbell with structure, not speculation. For advisors, the lesson is clear: durability comes from design, not from chasing market narratives.
Download the full Peregrine case study to see how one RIA reshaped its core allocation with a structure-first approach.