Passive Vs Active Investing - Which Is Better? - YouTube

Channel: Next Level Life

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Hey internet, Daniel here from Next Level Life and today we鈥檙e going to be talking
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about the differences between passive and active investing as well as exploring how
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much of a difference this one choice can make on your net worth by the time retirement rolls
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around.
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So what is passive investing?
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Passive investing is an investing strategy where the investor adopts a buy and hold strategy
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as opposed to making regular trades.
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Often times when people talk about passive investing they are actually talking about
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index investing.
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And index investing is exactly what it sounds like it's where you pick one of the indices
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to track and you basically have gain when the market goes up and take losses when the
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market goes down.
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It鈥檚 pretty simple.
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Common indices that are tracked would be the S&P 500 or the Dow Jones Industrial Average
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though there are several others.
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And the nice thing about index investing is it's usually very cost effective in comparison
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to active investing, because the fund does not have to pay a manager to analyze what's
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going on in the market and and have him or her trying and figure out which stocks are
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going to have the biggest gains and which ones should be sold every single day.
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Because again the goal of index investing is to just match the market over the Long
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Haul.
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Active investing on the other hand takes a Hands-On that requires someone to act in the
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role of portfolio manager, again trying to find a way to beat the market by taking full
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advantage of short-term stock price changes.
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This can work out very well for example when apple dropped down to less than $60 a share
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in 2013, portfolio managers were able to take advantage of that and now Apple sits at around
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$150 a share as of this recording.
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That means that over the course of a few years someone who had invested an Apple at $60 a
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share would have more than doubled their money.
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Of course it can also go the other way with a stock being picked up when it's at a high
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point because the manager thinks it's going to continue to go up but then it ends up going
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down and the investor loses money.
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So active investing requires confidence that whoever is managing the portfolio will know
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exactly when the right time to buy and sell is and it requires them to be right more than
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wrong.
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But of course the big question is which one makes you more money?
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Now you'd think that a professional manager's capabilities would trump that of a basic Index
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Fund because of their extensive knowledge, expertise and experience.
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However more often than not the opposite is true.
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Now I do want to point out that when it comes to investing you can find numbers that prove
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just about any point that you want to make.
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It鈥檚 just the nature of the beast when you鈥檝e got so many years of data to draw from, however
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it does seem that more often than not passive investing wins out over active investing in
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the long run.
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And there have been tons of studies over the course of decades that have proven this to
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be the case.
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It turns out that only a small percentage of actively managed funds ever do better than
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passive index funds.
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In fact in an article from CNBC that I鈥檒l link to in the description below, found that
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between March of 2000 and September of 2016 only about 30% of actively managed large-cap
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funds outperformed the S&P 500 over the course of any 3 year period during that time.
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Of those that did, only a third managed to beat the market the following year, so a four
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year period.
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And only 13% managed to do it over a five year period.
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And over a six year period, only 5% of actively managed funds outperformed the market.
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That is insane!
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And the percentages don鈥檛 change much if you look at mid or small-cap, or international
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funds, or even emerging market funds.
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That means that even if you鈥檙e in your early sixties and just starting to invest for retirement
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you鈥檝e got roughly a 1 in 20 chance of beating the market between now and the day you reach
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retirement age if you only use actively managed funds.
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But how can that be?
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Most of the professional managers went to school for this and many have been doing the
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job for years!
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And it鈥檚 the job of an active manager to make you more money than you would have investing
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passively yourself.
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Shouldn鈥檛 they be able to do their job more than 5% of the time?
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And the answer is, yes, so why can鈥檛 they?
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Well this is primarily because none of us really knows what's going to happen in the
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market a year from now or two years from now or heck even a couple of days from now and
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even with all the analysis and expertise in the world the process of timing the market
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is often times still little more than guesswork.
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As I mentioned earlier active investing can also be very expensive with expense ratios
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often hovering around the 1.4% mark compared to the 0.6% average for passive investing
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funds.
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Put simply, this means that for an actively managed portfolio to beat a passive portfolio
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it has to outperform the market by more than 0.8% every single year.
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And not only is that not easy to do it can also make a pretty significant difference
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in your retirement fund.
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And I will get into that in just a minute, but I want to finish explaining the concepts
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first.
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Some other advantages to passive investing are as I already mentioned the very low fees
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associated with it because no one's having to analyze stocks and try and pick which ones
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are going to go up and which ones are going to go down so the overhead cost is significantly
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lower.
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It's also very tax-efficient, because it's usually a buy-and-hold strategy which means
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the capital gains taxes for every year are usually lower than it would be if you were
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actively trading.
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Now this can be offset in an actively managed portfolio by tax management strategies where
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you sell off investments that are losing money, but it鈥檚 still worth noting because even
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if you do that you鈥檙e still probably going to have to fork over more money in transaction
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costs, at least if that鈥檚 the kind of setup that your manager has.
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Many of them are starting to move away from that business model so here鈥檚 to hoping
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that it鈥檒l soon be a worry of the past.
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Now to this point in the video, I鈥檝e probably been sounding like a passive investing fanboy,
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because of all the praise I鈥檝e given it.
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But that's not to say that it doesn't have its disadvantages as well.
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Many people who favored active investing claim that passive investing is very limited, which
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admittedly is true you're usually limited to a specific index or some other predetermined
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set of investments, like the dogs of the Dow for instance and as a result there's not a
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whole lot of variance.
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With a buy and hold strategy like this you're kind of locked into whatever your Holdings
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are no matter what happens in the market.
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So a down year could be extra painful.
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Some also feel that the returns can be very small in comparison because by definition
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your matching the index so you're almost never going to beat the market.
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And I feel like I鈥檝e done nothing but bash active investing so far in this video and
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it makes it seem like it has no merits of it鈥檚 own, which is of course untrue.
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Some advantages to active investing are the flexibility that it offers you because since
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active managers aren't required to follow specific index they can find those diamond
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in the rough stocks if you will and get some really big returns in a short period of time.
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Active managers can also hedge their bets using various techniques such as short sales
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or put options and they're able to sell specific stocks or get out of certain sectors of the
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market if the risks become too high.
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Which can save the investor tons of money by avoiding losses... or cost them big time
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by missing out on sudden gains.
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Again it's like looking into a crystal ball more often than not you really just don't
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know!
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Now coming back to the idea of expense ratios let's see how much of a difference that 1.4%
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average for actively managed portfolios makes compared to the 0.6% average of a passive
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investment.
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Take John for example, he's been investing $100 a month in nothing but actively managed
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funds since he was 25 years old.
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He is now 65 and getting ready to retire.
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He has averaged a 6% rate of return over his investing lifetime, what would his net worth
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be today?
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Well he started with nothing, invested $100 a month for 40 years and got a 6% rate of
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return.
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Of course we have to take off the 1.4 expense ratio that he had to pay out every year so
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effectively he got a 4.6% rate of return after expenses and when you punch the numbers into
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a compound interest calculator you come out with a net worth of $134,839.84 at age 65.
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Now let's assume that Jane did the same thing over the same period of time except she invested
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in nothing but passive Investments.
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I know this is a little bit hypothetical but the point is just to illustrate the difference
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that expense ratios make over the long term so we're going to say that she also averaged
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a 6% rate of return over the same 40 years and also invested $100 per month, just like
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John.
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The only difference is that she had an average expense ratio of .6% due to the fact that
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the passive Investments are less costly.
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So we punch the same numbers into the calculator, she starts at zero invests $100 per month
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for 40 years with a 6% average rate of return take away the .6% expense ratio that she had
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to pay out every year giving her an effectively a 5.4% rate of return after expenses and we
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come out with a net worth of $164,598.22.
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Now that may not seem like much but when you divide $164,598 by $134,839 you find that
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Jane actually has 22% more in her retirement account than John does even though they got
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the same rate of return and they invested the same amount of money over the same amount
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of time Jane ends up with almost an extra $30,000 to her name.
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And the difference only gets larger the more they put in, say for example both Jane and
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John invested $500 a month over the same 40 years and both got the same 6% rate of return
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jane would end up with just a hair under $823,000 by the time she reaches age 65 whereas John
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would end up with $674,000.
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Which means that now Jane almost $150,000 more than John when she's getting ready to
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retire.
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That's crazy right?
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And let's say the market did better over the course of those 40 years say the market average
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a 7% rate of return with everything else staying the same.
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John and Jane invest $500 a month for 40 years at a 7% rate of return.
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Jane ends up with $1,062,942.44 at age 65 and John ends up with $865,715.64, which is
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a difference of just under $200,000.
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So bottom line expense ratios do make quite a difference but as we've learned in this
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video they're not the only thing that you need to focus on when choosing an investment
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strategy.
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Despite the heated debate between people who believe that passive Investments are the best
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way to go and people who believe that active Investments are the best way to go it really
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comes down to what you're looking for as an investor.
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If you're young and you're looking to be in it for the long haul and you're willing to
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ride the waves of the market passive investing is probably the better way to go for you.
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The expenses are less, it's usually more tax efficient, and if you're able to ride the
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market you're usually going to win out over the long term compared to an active investing
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strategy.
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However if you do have fun Trading, analyzing stocks, and you don't want to be locked into
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certain Investments when the market goes down then perhaps an active investing strategy
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would be your cup of tea.
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But that'll about do it for me I hope you enjoyed the video and if you did or if you
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learned something be sure to like And subscribe I've got a lot more of these Finance coming
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out in the near future as well as some more book summaries and other fun stuff.
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But with that being said, thanks for watching and have a great day.