The Holy Grail in equity markets
The search for the Holy Grail has been going on for centuries. The Holy Grail has inspired countless authors, expeditions, search parties, film writers, and there are fairytales about it. For many portfolio managers, the Holy Grail is a successful long/short, market neutral portfolio.

The 'problem' with all long-only equity portfolios is that no matter how good your portfolios manager is or what strategy you choose, the portfolio will suffer from the equity market cycles. A low-risk portfolio will fall less in a bear market, but it will fall.
We at DNB Systematic Equity Team just went live with our well-prepared implementation of a European Equity Market Neutral portfolio. This portfolio aims to generate strong, stable absolute returns with as low correlation as possible to equity markets. It's a portfolio that delivers outperformance that is not 'contaminated' with the market return.
Despite all the critics against active portfolio management, it is not very hard to identify portfolio managers with long and strong track records. You can find managers with many years of stable Information Ratios and alphas. Yet, the Holy Grails, the outstanding Market Neutral portfolios, are very hard to find.
I have no doubt that there are portfolio managers out there that generate significant true alpha. Some of them are individuals, some are well-organized teams, and some create alpha with quantitative methods. I am a quantitative portfolio manager, but contrary to what many would expect, I don't think quantitative managers are better at generating alpha than traditional managers, in general. I do think quants are better at risk management. And risk management is a real challenge in constructing a market-neutral equity portfolio. I think you can become a successful portfolio manager without sophisticated risk control. –I really don't think it is possible to make a true market-neutral equity portfolio without serious efforts to control risk.
Most active portfolio management requires an alpha model to generate outperformance and risk management to give the portfolio the characteristics it is meant to have.
I really don't think it is possible to make a true market-neutral equity portfolio without serious efforts to control risk.