Friday, October 26, 2007

INDEX FUND INVESTING: NOT EXCITING, BUT VERY EFFECTIVE

I get many questions from students regarding investing. I do not consider myself to be an expert in the sense that I am a guru who can pick the hot stock or outperform the market.

What I can do is give what I believe to be good advice for investing for retirement. Put your money in index mutual funds and let compound interest take care of setting you up for a fantastic retirement.

Many investment professionals push investors to buy actively managed funds instead of index funds? Why? Well, the fees associated with index funds are very low (typically about 80-90% less than actively managed funds) and many investment professionals steer clients to the investments that pay them the most (trust me, that isn't index funds).

Check out the article below for more information about index fund investing.

And, if you are interested in taking a class that should help you to make smart moves with your money and plan for a wonderful retirement, consider signing up for FIN205.920, Personal Finance and Investing, in the spring semester.

From The New York Times:

IS it worth the risk to try to outperform the market?

“I have yet to meet a retiree that couldn’t have met his or her retirement goals just with market returns — and this is over a 40-year career,” said Paul Merriman, the editor of FundAdvice.com and an investment adviser at Merriman Berkman Next in Seattle.

In his experience, most retired people regard an 8-to-12-percent compounded annual return as satisfactory for their needs. Any investor who simply bought and held a no-load mutual fund that replicated the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index would have had an 11.2 percent compounded return from 1970 to 2006. So why keep trying to pick stocks and time a volatile market when you can own the market through low-cost index funds?

Index funds are not just for the little guy who can’t take the heat, either. Theodore R. Aronson, an institutional money manager at Aronson Johnson Ortiz in Philadelphia, is paid by his clients to beat various benchmarks like the S.& P. 500 or the Russell 1000 — not to match them. His family’s money, by contrast, goes into 11 Vanguard index funds allocated 80 percent to equities and 20 percent to bonds. “Statistically it is so hard to prove that active managers can outperform, and that any outperformance is due to skill and not luck,” Mr. Aronson said.

His one-year return from indexing as of Oct. 2 was 23.5 percent; his three-year annualized return is 18.8 percent.

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