Index Funds vs Mutual Funds vs ETF (WHICH ONE IS THE BEST?!) - YouTube

Channel: It's Your Girl Rose

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What's the difference between index funds mutual funds versus ETFs. Each of these are different but similar
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investment vehicles with their own pros and cons.
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We hear these terms get thrown around a lot, and actually a lot of people mix them up
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So I know it can be confusing.
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I actually have a degree in finance
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But I didn't even learn this stuff in school. When I invested in ETS for the first time
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I learned later on that ETFs didn't have this one really important feature that I wanted in my investment portfolio,
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So I had to switch over to index funds and it was all kind of a hassle.
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I want to save you this trouble! In this video
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I want to share everything I learned with you so that you can be more informed before making any investments of your own.
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So if you want to learn the difference between index funds mutual funds and ETFs, and
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Which option might make the most sense for you then keep on watching.
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Before we get started go ahead and hit that subscribe button!
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My channel is all about money and investing for beginners and I know it's gonna help you learn a ton.
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So make sure to subscribe and hit the notification bell for new videos every week. So let's get right into it.
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I'm gonna start with mutual funds because they've been around the longest.
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Mutual funds came way before index funds and ETFs and the earliest-known mutual fund was supposedly invented way back in the
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1800s. They were created as a way for a bunch of people to pool their money and make investments together.
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Mutual funds offers three major benefits:
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the first is convenience. By investing in a mutual fund you get to own a bunch of different stocks all in one easy package. A
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Mutual fund could have hundreds of different stocks in it
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But you only have to make one
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Purchase. In a world without mutual funds, if you wanted to have say a hundred different stocks in your portfolio
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You'd have to make 100 separate purchases
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Which means you pay trading commission a hundred times and you'd waste a lot of time sitting in front of the computer
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Clicking the Buy button a hundred times. So inefficient, right?
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But by investing via a mutual fund you get instant ownership in all the stocks the mutual fund already
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Owns. And owning a lot of stocks all at once gives you diversification, which is the second major benefit of mutual funds.
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Diversification is a strategy that reduces your investing risk by spreading out your eggs. Instead of having all your money in one stock
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Which is the equivalent of putting all your eggs in one basket you
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Spread out your money of across many different stocks. That way if one of the stocks in the mutual fund totally crashes
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you'll still be fine, because each stock is only a small portion of your overall portfolio. Mutual funds typically consist of around
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90 stocks at a minimum,
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So they provide a lot of diversification that would be hard to replicate on your own.
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The third benefit of mutual funds is that they're managed by investment professionals.
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So rather than try to find stocks on your own, you have some super smart guy who
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Supposedly knows what he's doing pick the stocks for you. So mutual funds offer convenience,
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diversification, and access to professional money managers.
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But that doesn't mean mutual funds are 100 percent amazing. Convenience and diversification are definitely good benefits
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But the problem with having professional fund managers is that they charge a lot of fees. When some really smart well-educated
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Professional is picking the stocks for your mutual fund, that's called "active management". In return for managing your money
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actively managed mutual funds charge an annual fee of one to two percent of your account balance every year. So at 2% if you invested
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$10,000 in a mutual fund,
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$200 of that goes straight into the fund managers pocket. And even if the manager makes poor investment decisions and your account balance actually goes
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Down next year, you still get charged 2%. So you could literally end up with less money than you started with
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But the fund manager would still get paid millions of dollars for their services.
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And even if you find a fund manager who's done really well for a couple of years
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Their performance usually doesn't last over the long run, and the cost of fees can really add up.
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Over the years fees will reduce your nest egg by hundreds of thousands of dollars.
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So the vast
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Majority of mutual funds are totally not worth the high fees. Then came the index fund. One day a guy named Jack Bogle
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Got so sick of mutual funds ripping people off that he invented a whole new category of mutual funds called
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Index funds. And index fund totally revolutionized the investing landscape. Unlike traditional mutual funds,
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Index funds are passively managed.
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This means that rather than paying an expensive fund manager to do active management,
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The fund follows a fixed formula that totally eliminates the need for someone to make buying and selling decisions.
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The formula that it follows is based on an index, and that's where the term index fund comes from. An index is a
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Representative sample of the stock market and indexes were created as a tool to quickly measure stock market performance.
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Rather than looking up thousands of stocks individually, an
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Index is just one simple thing
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You can look up to just see how the stock market did that day.
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If you're not sure what a stock market index is, then make sure to check out this video right here for an in-depth explanation.
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So Jack Bogle created the first index fund in the
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1970s, and it mirrored the the S&P 500 index which is one of the most widely followed indexes in the world.
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Since the fund simply buys whatever stocks are in the S&P 500 index,
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The fees are much much much lower because you're not paying for expensive fund managers to make these decisions for you. The Vanguard S&P
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500 index fund charges an annual fee of point zero four percent. Peanuts!
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So index funds are a type of mutual fund.
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All index funds are mutual funds, but not all mutual funds are
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index funds. An index fund will clearly state that it tracks an index, and it will specify which index it tracks. For example on
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Vanguard com, if you look up VFIAX it says here "index fund" in the title
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So it's pretty obvious that it's an index fund. And if you look at the fund's prospectus
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It specifically states, "The fund employees in indexing investment approach designed to track the performance of the Standard and Poor's
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500 index a widely recognized benchmark of US stock market performance."
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It doesn't get any more obvious than that.
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But for a mutual fund that is not an index fund the prospectus will state something like this:
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"Advisor
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Independently selects and maintains a portfolio of common stocks for the fund."
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So that's kind of how in a nutshell you can distinguish between
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Mutual funds that are index funds and mutual funds that are actively managed and so are not index funds. Moving right along to ETF
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Also known as exchange-traded funds.
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ETFs were introduced about 15 years after the first index fund, and they're very similar to index funds
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Except for one major difference: with index funds you can only buy and sell shares once a day.
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But with ETFs you can buy and sell your shares whenever the stock market is open
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Even though an ETF is not really a stock you can buy and sell
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ETFs as if they were a stock. A lot of times you'll hear the terms ETFs and index funds used interchangeably
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But they're not the same thing. If you wanted to invest in the S&P 500 you could either go with an S&P 500
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Index fund like the Vanguard one that I mentioned earlier, or you can go with an ETF like the SPDR S&P 500
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ETF. The question you have to ask yourself is
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do I need the 24/7 tradeability that in ETF offers, or am I just good with an index fund?
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In my experience being able to trade ETFs really doesn't help you achieve long term investing success.
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Because the fact that it trades like a stock and you can watch it go up and down on a stock chart
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It really only encourages impulsive buying and selling and
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Human nature has a tendency towards gambling like behavior, which is obviously the opposite of smart investing.
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So I personally think ETFs do more harm than good and
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You know, why even deal with the added temptation?
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So if you're not sure whether you should go with ETFs vs index funds then I would recommend just choosing index funds.
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They're essentially the same thing, but you won't have the added temptation to gamble with your money.
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Most people will only have to buy once,
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Hold and then sell when they retire so you really don't need the 24/7 tradeability of an ETF.
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Another reason why I like index funds and this is a huge reason actually and the reason why I switched over from
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ETF to index funds is
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Because index funds offer automatic
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Reinvestment. This makes it really easy for you to save and invest
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Without even lifting a finger. Index funds allow you to set up a recurring monthly
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Deposit from your checking account and they'll automatically buy more shares for you every month.
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The best part is that there's no additional charge for doing this.
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This is a free automatic reinvestment feature and it makes it a no-brainer for you to automate good investing habits.
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ETFs do not offer this feature if you wanted to contribute more to your investments every month.
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You'd have to buy more shares of the ETF every month, which means more work for you. Of course
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It means you have to pay trading commission's every time, and who wants to do that?
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So I hope you have a better understanding now of mutual funds, index funds,
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ETFs and what similarities and differences they have. Mutual funds came first and they offered the benefit of pooled
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Investing, then index funds came along as a special type of mutual fund with much lower fees and a type of management called
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Passive management, and then finally the ETF came on the scene which trades like a stock and offers everything that index funds offer except automatic
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Reinvestment. For more beginner friendly info on stock investing make sure you also check out these two videos here
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and
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If you're new to the channel hit that subscribe button below for new videos every week.
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If you have any questions at all about what I talked about in this video,
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Let me know in the comments and I'll be sure to get back to you.
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You can also reach out to me on Instagram at @investingwithrose. So I look forward to connecting with you there.
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Always remember to go after your dreams
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unapologetically and to live life on your terms!