What are systematic equities?
Systematic equity investing is a way to invest in the stock market using clear rules and data, rather than guesswork or hunches. Instead of trying to pick stocks based on trends or headlines, this approach uses research, data, and technology to systematically identify opportunities across global markets.
The goal? To help investors in PIMCO’s multi-asset strategies grow their investments more steadily, avoid over concentrations in big-name stocks, and help mitigate the volatility that often comes from following the “crowd”.
Over the past several years, global equity markets have been defined by concentration, with a handful of mega-cap technology companies accounting for an outsized share of returns. This has led to a narrow bull market and pushed valuations higher, particularly in the U.S. Yet, as we enter 2026, the broad perception of “expensive equities” masks pockets of value and a growing opportunity set, supported by solid economic growth and improving earnings.
For more than two decades, PIMCO has designed and managed global asset allocation strategies in which equities play a pivotal role. Within these multi-asset portfolios, equity exposures are implemented through a disciplined, data-driven and repeatable approach to pursuing equity alpha that is designed to help complement broader portfolio objectives rather than operate in isolation. In this context, we believe our systematic equity approach is well positioned for navigating toward more balanced and broader market participation.
Our rules-based, systematic equity investment process focuses on identifying well-rounded companies across regions and sectors, helping our multi-asset portfolios remain broadly diversified while accessing sources of return potential that more traditional approaches may overlook.
In an environment where equity markets have become increasingly concentrated, we believe this discipline is particularly important and can contribute meaningfully to outcomes across the multi-asset portfolios that incorporate it.
How are our strategies positioning for opportunities in 2026?
In 2025, global equity markets returned more than 22%Footnote1 as valuations approached historically high levels. Following over a decade of U.S. equity market outperformance, markets outside the U.S. – notably emerging markets (EM) in Asia as well as parts of Europe – delivered higher returns than the U.S. in 2025Footnote2. Across investment styles, value, momentum, and growth factors all contributed positively, while quality lagged. Despite market concentration, differences between individual stocks widened materially.
Against this backdrop, our 2026 positioning focuses on:
| Value beneath elevated U.S. valuations | U.S. valuations remain rich, but solid economic growth and improving earnings point to a more balanced, mid-cycle environment. This should help create opportunities for active, systematic stock selection to seek value beyond the most expensive companies. |
| Global diversification with an ex-U.S. tilt | We continue to favour regions such as EM Asia and parts of Europe, seeking out “hidden gem” companies whose valuations we believe are more reasonable and whose earnings outlooks appear stronger. |
| Alpha in the AI supply chain and high-quality sectors | We see particular potential in EM companies linked to the AI supply chain, such as top-tier Asian semiconductor suppliers. We also see value in high-quality, defensive sectors such as healthcare, supported by resilient cash flows and durable fundamentals. |
| Broader earnings and continued dispersion | We expect earnings growth to broaden across sectors, with non-tech areas likely contributing more meaningfully. Continued dispersion among individual stocks should reward active selection and diversified factor exposures. |
PIMCO’s systematic equity approach
Our systematic equity strategies are grounded in the belief that markets are not perfectly efficient and that persistent sources of return can be accessed through a transparent, time-tested process (see Figure 1).
- Multi-factor lens (four themes): We analyse companies using momentum, growth, quality, and value factors – drawing on both traditional data (earnings, cash flows) and alternative data (text analytics from company filings, customer-supplier relationships).
- Research-driven signals: We use more than two dozen distinct “alpha signals”, including over 15 proprietary PIMCO-designed indicators, to help identify well-rounded companies with strong return potential.
- Quality of signals over quantity of signals: Return generation can often stem from the robustness of individual signals rather than their sheer number. Our process aims to only include signals grounded in sound economic theory that we believe are capable of generating alpha net of transaction costs across the global opportunity set.
- Diversified portfolios with risk controls: We look to spread exposure across countries, sectors, and companies, supported by guardrails designed to pursue a balance between identifying companies poised to outperform and avoiding concentration risk.
Case studies: How PIMCO's systematic strategies responded to 2025's shifting signals
Throughout 2025, our systematic equity process dynamically adjusted portfolio positioning as underlying factor signals evolved. This approach helped increase exposure to securities where multiple signals strengthened in tandem and reduced exposures where signal profiles weakened or became less differentiated.
The examples below are provided for illustrative purposes only and were selected by PIMCO to demonstrate how our process is designed to respond to changing market conditions. They do not represent all portfolio decisions or outcomes, and signal changes are one of the many inputs within our overall investment processFootnote3:
- AI-linked semiconductor supplier in emerging markets
As 2025 progressed, this company’s score profile strengthened meaningfully, with improving earnings indicators, firmer momentum trends, and supportive industry data. With these signals reinforcing one another, our portfolios increased exposure to the stock as its scoring profile continued to improve. - Global technology infrastructure provider
Mid-year, momentum indicators strengthened while quality and valuation signals remained steady. With several strong indicators aligning at once, our portfolios increased their positioning to reflect what we believe was a notable improvement in the stock’s overall attractiveness. - Large global healthcare company
After delivering solid early-year performance, this company’s earnings-quality metrics began to soften and its overall signal strength moderated. In line with our disciplined process, our portfolios reduced exposure as the stock’s scores weakened.
Why systematic, active equity matters now
Passive strategies can overweight areas where valuations are stretched, while traditional discretionary active management may expose investors to concentration risk. A globally-diversified, systematic, and rules-based approach can help address these challenges by:
- Identifying diverse sources of return potential across regions, sectors, and companies
- Managing concentration risk and reduce imbalanced exposure across investment styles
- Adapting as market conditions shift, through disciplined, rules-based re-balancing
The challenge with fundamental active management
Most active equity managers have struggled to consistently outperform their benchmarks, particularly in markets dominated by a small number of stocks. Over the trailing one-year periodFootnote4, less than 40% of active managers in Morningstar’s Global Large-Cap Blend Equity category outperformed their benchmarks. Over longer periods, the success rate falls dramatically, with only 3.7% outperforming over the past decade. Notably, over the last 10 years, the median active global equity manager underperformed the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) by a cumulative 76%.
Several behavioural biases may contribute to this:
- Overconfidence: Making outsized bets on familiar companies
- Performance chasing: Buying recent winners
- Familiarity bias: Focusing too heavily on home markets or well-known brands
A disciplined, data-driven, and rules-based approach helps mitigate these biases and helps support more consistent decision-making.
Conclusion
Heading into 2026, headline equity valuations remain elevated, but opportunities are expanding across regions, sectors, and styles. In this environment, a disciplined, systematic approach can help identify emerging leaders while avoiding overexposure to a more concentrated set of stocks.
Within the equity allocations of PIMCO’s multi-asset strategies, we are consistently reviewing and evaluating long-term themes to balance exposures across quality, value and momentum factors, and allocating to markets where earnings growth prospects appear to be improving, with the goal of improving portfolio outcomes over time.
By combining clear, intuitive alpha signals with robust research, data, and risk controls, PIMCO’s systematic equity approach is well-positioned to help navigate the next phases of market evolution in pursuit of consistent, long-term outcomes across our asset allocation strategies.
1 Source: Bloomberg. Global equities represented by the MSCI ACWI Index. Return to content
2 Source: Bloomberg. EM equities represented by the MSCI Emerging Markets Index; European equities represented by the Euro STOXX 50, FTSE 100, and MSCI Europe indices; U.S. equities represented by the S&P 500 Index. Return to content
3 Past performance, factor signals, and portfolio positions are not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results. Return to content
4 Data as of December 31, 2025. Source: Morningstar. Return to content