The ‘father of passive investing’, Burton Malkiel, Princeton University professor emeritus of economics and author of the famous investing book, “A Random Walk Down Wall Street“, believes that most investors should invest passively. This idea is embodied by exchange-traded funds that track major stock market indexes, such as the S&P 500, and passive mutual funds.
Malkiel’s theory is that investors are better off buying a broad universe of stocks, index funds, and minimizing fees rather than paying an active manager who may not beat the market. Index funds, also known as passive funds, are structured to invest in the same securities that make up a given index, and seek to match the performance of the index they track, whether positive or negative. As the name implies, no manager or management team actively picks stocks or makes buy and sell decisions.
In contrast, active funds attempt to beat whichever index serves as the fund’s benchmark, although — and this is important — there is no guarantee they will do so. Active managers conduct research, closely monitor market trends and employ a variety of trading strategies to achieve return. But this active involvement comes at a price. Actively-managed funds typically have significantly higher fees and expenses.
A 2016 study by S&P Dow Jones Indices showed that about 90 percent of active stock managers failed to beat their index benchmark targets over the previous one-year, five-year and 10-year periods; fees explain a significant part of that under performance.
Vanguard’s John ‘Jack’ Bogle – Stay the Course
Many industry leaders, including Vanguard’s John ‘Jack’ Bogle, who pioneered index funds, were influenced by Malkiel’s theory on passive investing.
Jack Bogle, who founded the pioneering investment firm Vanguard in 1975, is widely regarded as the father of index investing. Index investing is a strategy that functions best when investors sit on their hands for decades. This strategy is far removed from the thrill and excitement of trying to beat the market by picking individual stocks — but one that research says works.
Over the decades, Jack Bogle’s philosophy has acquired a plethora of devout investors whom follow his teachings. His followers, known as the Bogleheads, embrace long-term commitments to broad, boring investments. Bogleheads choose investments that are low-cost index mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
These low-cost index mutual funds and ETFs are designed to mimic their respective benchmark stock or bond markets, not beat them. Bogleheads’ core belief— stay the course — is so essential to their investment strategy. Bogleheads’ key tips for beginners are:
Early investing is better than perfect investing
Don’t get overwhelmed with your options and let decision paralysis keep you from investing sooner. The magic of compound interest is where your money grows that much faster because you keep earning interest on your interest. To illustrate the strategy, a person who starts investing small amounts in their early 20s will be better off than someone who starts later and invests larger amounts later to catch up.
Stay in the market; Don’t try to time the market
For Bogleheads, the best way to invest is through passively-managed index funds like those pioneered by Vanguard. That way, while your investment will rise and fall with the market, you’re not a victim to any particular company’s misfortune.
Investing in passively-managed funds is a core Boglehead tenet — and research shows the strategy is a sound one. The majority of actively-managed funds have underperformed the stock market for nearly a decade, according to an annual S&P Dow Jones Indices report. In other words, trying to pick winners doesn’t work; simply riding out the market’s ups and downs does.
Don’t peek; Set it and forget it
It is advised that investors check their investments a few times a year—but they shouldn’t react to market volatility or short-term corrections. The key to passive investing is to “set it and forget it”— that is, once you know what you’re investing in, leave it alone, let the market do its thing and be patient.
Over the past decade, passive investment has been closing the gap on active management. Yet, the ‘father of passive investing’ believes there are still too many investors who are not taking advantage of passive investing. Malkiel believes strongly that “…[passive investing] works. It’s the best thing for individual investors to do for the core of their portfolio.”
Keep it simple
In a nutshell, the best approach is a simple, low cost, diversified portfolio of index funds that matches the market return. Don’t try to beat the market—ignore hot tips and check your returns infrequently.
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