2. Skill or
Luck:
The average actively managed investment must underperform
the indexed investment, when all costs are deducted. [source]
Those actively managed investments that beat the indexed investments fail
to consistently beat the index in the future. The reason for market beating
performance in a random market is simply due to luck
and not due to a skill that is repeatable.
Research
shows that only about 3% of active managers beat an appropriate index
over a 10 year or longer period. Needless to say, it is nearly impossible
to predict those winners in advance. Lucky investors are well advised
not to expect a continuation of their good fortune. [see 1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7, 8]

3. Index Portfolios
Best Capture Risk and Return:
Actively managing your money will create higher risk and lower returns than a globally diversified, tax-managed, and small value tilted portfolio of index funds. Due to commissions, management fees, margin costs, taxes, stock randomness, and market efficiencies, you will slowly transfer your money into the pockets of stock brokers, mutual fund managers, hedge fund managers, and the many other individuals profiting from your numerous transactions and your lack of understanding of free market principles. Active management is hazardous to your wealth. A recent study by Brad Barber of the University of California, Davis, showed that 82% of the 925,000 active traders on one stock exchange lost $8.2 Billion/year from 1995 to 1999. Dalbar Research stated in their 2005 report on Investor Behavior that
the average equity investor earned a paltry 3.90% annually for the last
20 years, compared to 3.0% inflation and 11.9% for the S&P 500 over
that same period. The gap between the average active investor and the market
is 8%/yr. The global equity total market value is $25 Trillion as of 12/31/04, so 8% of that is $2 Trillion!
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The emotions of active investors go up and down like a roller coaster,
leading them to negative returns on average, after expenses and taxes
are deducted.

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4. Returns
from the Risk of Capitalism Rank Highest:
Capitalism is a great
idea that has worked for centuries. It has provided an annualized return
of about 10%/year since 1926 and has the highest rate of return of all
investments tracked over periods of 50 years or more. That rate of return
is explained by the difference between the low risk of capital and the
high risk of capitalism, as seen below.

It is not the result
of speculating in short term price changes. There is no additional expected
return from speculation above the average return. The gains from speculation
are offset by the losses in any random situation, leaving the average,
or the index, as the most likely return. This concept is known as a zero
sum game. Investors
earn returns from consistant exposure to the right
risk factors, not from gambling on
tomorrow’s news.
5. Market
Efficiency Is Why Capitalism Works Better:
The world’s
stock exchanges facilitate a free market system that is the cornerstone
of capitalism. These capital markets simultaneously price the cost of
capital and the expected return from the risk of capitalism. Free markets
perform this highly important task in the most effective and efficient
manner because the knowledge of all investors exceeds the knowledge of
any individual. Due to the millions of intelligent and highly competitive
investors, it is unlikely that any individual investor will consistently
profit at the expense of all other investors. From this we can conclude
that free markets work and that current prices reflect the knowledge
and expectations of all investors at all times. [more]
This concept is known as the Efficient
Market Theory. If free markets were not more efficient than controlled
markets, like those in communist countries such as North Korea or Cuba,
then the communists would be more prosperous than the capitalists. [more]
Proof that capitalism keeps the lights on. The top half of this image is North Korea (Communism) and the lower half is South Korea, who has embraced the ideals of Capitalism.
6. Cost of
Capital and Expected Return for Capitalists:
The expected return
for a capitalist, equity buyer, or investor is equal to the cost of capital
of the equity seller. An intelligent capitalist will estimate the expected
return based on the risk of the equity, which is tied to the risk of the
company. The higher the risk of the company, the higher their cost of
capital, and the higher the expected return for the capitalist. The lower
the risk of the company, the lower their cost of capital, and the lower
the expected return for the capitalist. Those investors who carefully
match their risk capacity with their risk exposure have the best chance
of obtaining the long-term historical returns of the global markets. A
buy, hold, and rebalanced
risk exposure strategy is the best method to capture those returns.
7. Small Value versus Large Growth Companies:
Public
companies that are unglamorous, small, and relatively cheap (small
value) are riskier and have higher costs of capital than those that
are glamorous, large and relatively expensive (large growth.) As a
result, a dollar invested in a Fama/French Index of small value companies
in 1927 grew to $40,095 by the end of 2004 (14.6% annualized return),
and a dollar invested in a Fama/French Index of large growth companies
grew to only $1,154 over the same period (9.6% annualized return.)
[more]

8. Diversify,
Diversify, Diversify:
Diversification is the investor’s
best friend because it reduces the uncertainty of expected returns, otherwise
known as risk, without changing the expected return. Concentrating investments
only adds risk, and does not increase expected return. For example, any
one stock in the S&P 500 has an expected return of about 10% per year,
plus or minus about 50% two thirds of the years. However, the S&P
500 Index has the same 10% expected return, but it only has a risk of
plus or minus 20% two thirds of the years. So 10% plus or minus 20% is
far superior to 10% plus or minus 50%. Highly efficient portfolios of
index funds have had returns of 14.3%/year with risks of 15.6% over the
last 34 years, after fees (see Index Portfolio
100, which includes about 16,000 companies from 35 countries.) This
is why buying the whole haystack (index) is better than looking for the
needle (a stock) in the haystack. What is the risk and expected return
of your portfolio, based on the same investment strategy over the last
34 years? [compare]

9. Selecting
Index Funds:
Dimensional Fund Advisors is the premier
commercial provider of capital markets research, historical risk, return
and correlation data, investment advisor education, and mutual fund products
that reflect the leading academic research. Their complete product line
of index mutual funds are based on the efficiency of capital markets.
They have constructed unique rules of ownership for their funds that allow
investors to better capture the right risk factors and engineer portfolios
with greater precision and efficiency. At the heart of their fund eligibility
rules is the Fama and French three-factor model, which has become the
gold standard among academic researchers for risk-adjusted returns. The
three-factor model on average explains more than ninety percent of the
performance of diversified portfolios of stocks.
As
proof of DFA’s unique position in the investment product industry,
Dalbar surveyed investment advisors four times between 1997 and 2004.
The study was titled “The Professionals’ Pick.” Dalbar
rated DFA the best overall no-load mutual fund company in 1997, 2000,
2002, and number two in 2004. DFA rated highest in the “Investment
Management” and “Current Use” categories in the 2004
survey. See table below . These funds are low cost,
style pure and well diversified.

10. Peace
of Mind:
Don’t let your retirement years be tainted by
the discomfort of poverty. Reliance on family members or government programs
for your financial well-being will be a source of unhappiness, insecurity,
and low self-esteem. The sooner you start saving and planning for your
retirement, the better. A prudent
and intelligently managed investment portfolio of index funds has the
highest probability of providing security and peace of mind in the years
when it will be needed the most.
To further understand
the above 10 points, we have created Index Funds: The 12-Step Program.
You can begin your climb with the overview.
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