What Are Index Funds? - YouTube

Channel: TD Ameritrade

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Funds that track a market index, such as the S&P 500庐, are known as "index funds."
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Index funds include both index mutual funds and index exchange-traded funds, or ETFs.
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These funds typically use a passive investing strategy, which means their objective is to
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deliver returns similar to an index of investments.
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However, index funds usually deliver returns that are slightly lower than an index due
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to fees associated with these funds.
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In this video, we'll discuss how index funds work, identify some of the indices these funds
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track, and examine benefits and risks associated with this type of fund.
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Simply put, index funds are built to have a similar performance to that of a major market
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index.
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This means they tend to be diversified in securities across that index and include a
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number of investments.
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There are many market indices, and index funds that follow them.
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For example, if you want to invest in U.S. stocks, you might invest in a fund that tracks
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an index like the S&P 500, which follows the 500 largest stocks in the market; the Dow
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Jones Industrial AverageSM, which includes 30 large-cap industrial stocks; the NASDAQ-100,
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which follows 100 large-cap technology stocks; or the Russell 2000庐, which tracks 2,000
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small-cap stocks.
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For international stocks, an example of a widely tracked index is the MSCI EAFE, which
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includes large-cap stocks in developed countries across Europe, Australia, and the Far East.
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For U.S. bonds, an example of a widely tracked index is the Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond
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Index, which includes a mix of government bonds, mortgage-backed securities, and corporate
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bonds with different maturities.
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As you can see in these examples, index funds can track different assets, including stocks
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and bonds.
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There are even index funds that follow commodities, currencies, and other assets.
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But regardless of which type of asset they track, an index fund still has its risks.
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Put simply, index funds are exposed to the same risks as the index they're following.
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For instance, if the S&P 500 declines in value, then the index funds which track it will follow
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suit.
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An index fund that tracks bonds is at risk if interest rates rise and bonds decline in
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value.
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Some investors are willing to accept these risks and choose to invest in index funds
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because of the potential benefits they might offer.
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A primary benefit is the typically lower expense ratio鈥攚hich is the ongoing cost of investing
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in the fund鈥攃ompared to actively managed funds.
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As the name implies, actively managed funds use an active investing strategy.
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This means that they frequently buy and sell investments.
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This typically results in higher costs, or expense ratios, and can be a drag on a portfolio's
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performance over time.
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Because index funds are passively managed and simply track an index, they generally
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have a low portfolio turnover, which means they infrequently buy and sell investments.
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Infrequent buying and selling typically translates into low expense ratios.
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The low expense ratios of index funds can possibly lead to more growth when compared
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to the higher expense ratios of similar actively managed funds.
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Let's look at an example.
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Suppose an investor purchases $50,000 of two funds that both grow 7% per year - before
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expenses - over the next 30 years.
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The funds are similar in all respects except expense ratio
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Fund A is an actively managed fund with an expense ratio of 1.2%.
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This fund would grow to $ $271,356.
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Fund B is an index fund with an expense ratio of 0.2%.
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This fund would grow to $359,838.
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That's a difference of $88,482, and it's all thanks to a low expense ratio.
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The low cost of passively managed index funds can make a difference and is a reason index
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funds may outperform actively managed funds over long time periods.
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This is why some investors take the "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" approach
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and use index funds to simply track market indices.