Safe Investing

Investment Advice

  Home   Sitemap   Develop Your Domain Names   

Investing Index

 

Indexing for Passive Aggressive Investors

Let's dispel the notion once and for all that index funds are only for passive investors. Sure, the original index funds tracked the S&P and were meant for investors who either believed you couldn't beat the market or didn't want to try.

Since their beginning, index funds have expanded their breath. You can find a fund which tracks any of the major indices and most industry sectors, such as health care and technology. The first cousin of index funds, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), do the same thing-they track indices.

Between index funds and ETFs you can mirror any major index, small index, industry sector, industry sub-sector (i.e., biotech or software), global region or individual country. You can also try to outguess the indices if you want.

For example, you can buy a S&P index fund which weights all 500 stocks equally or one which weights them by market cap, and so on. (Note to investors: make sure you know what you're buying.) Thus far, we've only focused on equity funds but index and exchange traded funds also are available for fixed income securities.

These funds are particularly suited for fixed income investments (Treasury, corporate or muni) because they can buy and sell bonds at much lower spreads than individual investors.

The proliferation of index and exchange traded funds means you can construct an entire portfolio of these funds to meet almost any investment strategy and risk level. A combination of a S&P fund, mid-cap and small cap domestic equity funds, foreign funds and fixed income funds of varying maturities, and a real estate fund would fit many investors objectives for a diversified portfolio with good growth potential and reasonable risk.

A mix of funds with individual securities or using a fund to fill a gap in your portfolio is an equally good idea. For the investor who wants to participate in, for example, biotech or emerging markets, a fund will enable her to achieve diversification in that sector (and the riskier the investment, the more important diversification becomes) with only a small investment.

Index funds can be bought and sold once a day; some ETFs as frequently as every hour. The larger funds are liquid investments and, in many cases, more liquid than their underlying securities (bonds and small cap stocks, for example). Transaction costs are modest, perhaps nothing for a no load fund (subject to certain holding period requirements) and typical stock commissions for an ETF.

So what's the downside? There's a body of academic literature and models which "prove" that a small group of fund mangers can outperform the market, think Peter Lynch and Bill Miller. If you believe this, and I do, or you just want to hedge your bet (I shudder as I write those words because investing is not a bet, it's hard work and serious business), you can mix some actively managed funds in with your index funds and ETFs.

The other issue you have to consider is that index funds/ETFs can take different investment strategies to for the same index. I gave the example above of two S&P 500 funds that are constructed differently. They will perform differently as a result. Structure and performance differences are even more pronounced as you invest in riskier/smaller indices.

Taking biotech, for instance, one fund may broadly diversify, another may invest in the ten largest biotech companies, and a third may take a different investment approach. As a result, their performance will widely differ.

So, again, make sure you understand your fund's approach. You can't tell a book or a fund by its name. Index funds and ETFs have a place in your portfolio; they're no longer just for passive investors.


Bill Byrnes is co-founder of MUTUALdecision, top mutual funds, providing investors with data on the top mutual funds, and author of the MUTUALdecision Blog. He's been CEO, chairman and served on the board of directors of several public and private companies. He holds MBA and JD degrees and is a Chartered Financial Analyst with over 30 years experience in the investment industry.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


what currency is used for hong kong stocks? (Answers: 3) (Comments: 0)
for example quotes from http://www.hkex.com.hk/invest/index.asp?id=company/quotemenu_page_e.asp or from http://finance.google.com/finance?q=1398.hk what currency are they using for hong kong stock quotes?

Get the answers

Related Investing-index Videos


Next page: Investing Information


Bookmark/Share This Page:

ADD TO DEL.ICIO.US
ADD TO DIGG
ADD TO FURL
ADD TO NEWSVINE
ADD TO NETSCAPE
ADD TO REDDIT
ADD TO STUMBLEUPON
ADD TO TECHNORATI FAVORITES
ADD TO SQUIDOO
ADD TO WINDOWS LIVE
ADD TO YAHOO MYWEB
ADD TO ASK
ADD TO GOOGLE
ADD TO MAGNOLIA
ADD TO NING
ADD TO RAWSUGAR
ADD TO SPURL
ADD TO TAGTOOGA


Bookmark and Share


Investing Index News


Muito obrigado - Moneyweb.co.za


Muito obrigado
Moneyweb.co.za
It is that last bit I guess which is most tricky, how to invest the float and often your fortunes are determined by the movements in the markets, ...

and more »

Read more...


Tue: Tel Aviv 25 up 20.3% in 5770 - Globes


Tue: Tel Aviv 25 up 20.3% in 5770
Globes
Meitav Investment House Ltd. says that the TASE outperformed most of the world's stock markets in 5770, although it noted that the first half of the year ...

and more »

Read more...


August 2010 Equities traded value rises 20% in first full month since ... - Al-Bawaba


August 2010 Equities traded value rises 20% in first full month since ...
Al-Bawaba
The FTSE NASDAQ Dubai UAE 20 index ended August 2010 at 1550, down 3.5% from the end of July 2010 and 16% lower than at the start of the year. ...

and more »

Read more...


The Egyptian Exchange (EGX) Monthly Statistical Report August 2010 - Exchange News Direct


The Egyptian Exchange (EGX) Monthly Statistical Report August 2010
Exchange News Direct
The top five losers were (in ascending order of price change) Modern Company for water proofing (Bitumode) (-20%), Arab Investment Urbanization (-19%), ...

Read more...


Vibrant bond market lifts brokers' earnings - Business Daily Africa


Business Daily Africa

Vibrant bond market lifts brokers' earnings
Business Daily Africa
The build-up of cash in the economy and scarcity of investment opportunities has seen the 91-day Treasury bill dip from 7.3 per cent in September 2009 to ...

and more »

Read more...


Portugal's EDP Sees Ebitda Rising From Govt Incentives - Wall Street Journal


Portugal's EDP Sees Ebitda Rising From Govt Incentives
Wall Street Journal
LB), or EDP, Monday said a regulatory change in Portugal, including an investment incentive for new power plants, will boost its earnings from next year. ...

and more »

Read more...


NIS's Debut Is Key to Serbian Bourse's Recovery, Investors, Traders Say - Bloomberg


NIS's Debut Is Key to Serbian Bourse's Recovery, Investors, Traders Say
Bloomberg
Foreign direct investment plummeted in the first half of the year to 419.5 million euros from 894 million euros in the same period last year. ...

Read more...



Active Index Investing: Maximizing Portfolio Performance and Minimizing Risk Through Global Index Strategies (Wiley Finance)
By: Steven A. Schoenfeld
Price: £39.99 (New)
£23.56 (Used)


What Wall Street Doesn't Want You to Know: How You Can Build Real Wealth Investing in the Index Funds
By: Larry E. Swedroe
Price: £4.60 (New)
£1.37 (Used)


Index Investing for Dummies (For Dummies (Lifestyles Paperback))
By: Russell Wild
Price: £6.30 (New)
£4.08 (Used)


The Complete Guide to Investing in Index Funds: How to Earn High Rates of Return Safely
By: Craig W. Baird
Price: £10.22 (New)
£10.62 (Used)


What Wall Street Doesn't Want You to Know: How You Can Build Real Wealth Investing in Index Funds
By: Larry E. Swedroe
Price: £3.68 (New)
£3.42 (Used)

Permalink: Investing Index | | Copyright © 2010 www.safeinvesting.info All Rights Reserved