What The Heck Is An Index Fund? - YouTube

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From an early age, we’re taught to celebrate winners.
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Look up to champions.
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Revere Gold-medalists.
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We make fun of “participation trophies”.
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I mean, when was the last time you heard somebody bragging about having a few dozen followers
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or a perfectly average salary?
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So how do you explain the explosion in popularity in an investment tool that offers nothing
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more than a guarantee of average results?
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Nothing fancy
 just average.
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Strange as it might seem at first glance, the meteoric rise of the “Index Fund”
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is a lesson in how sometimes, aiming for “average” might be the “best” strategy of all.
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In an earlier episode, we explained how mutual funds offer numerous benefits — like low
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share prices, broad diversification, convenience, and ease.
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Their debut in 1924 ushered in a golden age for active portfolio managers.
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Professional investment management was suddenly no longer just for the ultra-wealthy.
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The American middle class poured their savings and retirement accounts into mutual funds
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with abandon.
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Today, with nearly 10,000 mutual funds available, it can look like a Cheesecake Factory menu,
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endlessly long and complicated.
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So most fund managers compete to deliver the maximum amount of “alpha”.
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That’s just investor-speak for how much BETTER the portfolio manager did than the
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market average.
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The way managers measure their success is by comparing their returns to an “index”.
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An index is a hypothetical portfolio that represents a segment of a financial market.
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For example, the S&P 500 index measures the average stock gains or losses of the 500 largest
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companies in the US.
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There are indices for virtually every type of investment all across the world: precious
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metals, oil, bonds, even a pork carcass index.
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Their main use is as a comparison tool.
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For a long time, trying to “beat the index” with your mutual fund made sense to most investors.
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I mean, who would want to put their money with a fund manager who charged expensive
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fees but failed to beat the market most of the time?
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But then, a dirty little secret was uncovered.
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Most professional fund managers consistently fail to meet-or-beat their index by a wide margin.
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One study found that, 90% of active-fund managers did worse than their relative index.
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And these are supposed to be the best of the best with Ivy league educations, decades of
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experience and sophisticated trading tools.
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There are a few factors that make it difficult for fund managers to “beat the market”.
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The first is fees.
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Actively managed mutual funds employ teams of researchers, analysts, and traders.
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That costs money.
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And you, the investor, end up paying for it.
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Actively managed funds have annual fees on average of around 1.4%.
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In other words, your mutual fund has to make 1.4% per year just to keep you from LOSING money!
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A second key factor is that humans are really really bad at telling the future.
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In the 1973 book, “A Random Walk Down Wall-street”, Burton Milkier suggested that investment markets
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are too complicated and, well, random, to be consistently predicted.
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Researchers found that you’d do just as well picking stocks blindfolded as you would
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giving your money to a portfolio manager.
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No seriously, in a contest run by the UK Observer, professional portfolio managers tested their
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skills against the stock-picking prowess of a cat named Orlando.
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Orlando shredded the pro’s.
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Milkier suggested the creation of a new, low-cost mutual fund that simply buys the hundreds
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of stocks within the index, and doesn’t jump from stock to stock, trying to beat the
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market.
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That sounded like a great idea to a guy named John Bogle.
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In 1975, he launched Vanguard’s “First Index Investment Trust”.
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No more promises of beating the market — the only guarantee was that your investments would
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do slightly worse than average (since even index funds have minimal fees).
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Sound a little
 underwhelming?
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Yeah, it did to investors at the time too.
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The fund was ignored - or outright mocked - for years, and many thought it wouldn’t
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survive.
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Spoiler Alert: it did.
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Over the last half-century, more and more investor’s started wising up and today Index
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Funds and Index ETFs are more popular than ever with nearly 7 trillion dollars resting
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in index-type funds.
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It seems the promise of consistently “average” results doesn’t sound so shabby to investors
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any more.
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This is also thanks to the investing Godfather
Warren Buffet.
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In 2007 he made a million dollar bet with the world’s best hedge-fund managers that
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they couldn’t out-perform an S&P 500 Index Fund over a 10 year period.
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And wouldn’t you know it, despite weathering the 08 crash, the index fund trounced the
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hedge funds, averaging an annual 7.2% return, compared to the hedge funds measly 2.2%.
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Now, to be clear, index funds are not the “perfect investment.’’
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There is no such thing.
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But Warren Buffett famously quipped that Index-Fund investing is the best move for 99% of investors
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out there.
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So if you decide to join the club, start simple and don’t forget to diversify!
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For example, a basic blend of three broad indices would allow you to diversify into
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a huge spread of countries, companies, and asset types.
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Index funds are available through most fund-companies and can be bought within a retirement account
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like an IRA or 401k.
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And unless you’re a seasoned investor, speaking to a professional to set an ideal blend is
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a smart step.
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There are also online “robe-advisor” services that can automatically make the blend for
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you, based on your goals and risk tolerance.
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So next time your momma asks if you’re doing your best, say
 actually Warren Buffet says
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that I should just strive to be average!
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She’ll be thrilled.
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And that’s our two cents!
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Hey guys! It's Philip and Julia again.
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Question: How can you make your favorite meals even more delicious?
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Add a dash of science of course.
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Serving Up Science is a PBS Digital Studios show hosted by history buff, science writer and foodie
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Sheril Kirshenbaum who is serving us science backed answers to all of our biggest food questions such as:
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Should you let your meat rest?
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What's better, wild of farmed salmon?
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What makes blue cheese so stinky?
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Ah! I think you mean delicious.
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So, head on over to Serving Up Science and tell them Two Cents sent you.
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We'll be nerding out right along with you.
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What else would you like to know about Index funds?
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Ask your questions in the comments section.