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- | ======Index Fund====== | ||
- | An Index Fund (also known as an 'Index Tracker' | ||
- | ===== How Do Index Funds Work? ===== | ||
- | The magic of an index fund lies in its simplicity. The fund manager' | ||
- | The small gap between a fund's return and the index it follows is called [[tracking error]]. A well-run index fund has a very low tracking error, proving it's doing its job of replication effectively. The fund's portfolio is also periodically adjusted, a process known as [[rebalancing]], | ||
- | ===== The Allure of Simplicity and Low Costs ===== | ||
- | For millions of investors, index funds are the go-to choice. Their popularity rests on two powerful pillars: rock-bottom costs and instant diversification. | ||
- | ==== The Cost Advantage ==== | ||
- | This is the index fund's superpower. Because there' | ||
- | * An actively managed fund might charge 0.75%, 1%, or even more per year. | ||
- | * A typical S&P 500 index fund can charge as little as 0.03% per year. | ||
- | While that difference looks small, it creates a massive chasm in your returns over decades due to the power of compounding. Lower costs mean more of your money stays invested and working for you. It's the closest thing to a free lunch in investing. | ||
- | ==== Diversification by Default ==== | ||
- | With a single purchase, you can own a stake in hundreds or even thousands of companies. Buying one share of a total stock market index fund gives you instant [[diversification]] across the entire economy. This drastically reduces [[unsystematic risk]]—the risk that a single company' | ||
- | ===== An Index Fund Through a Value Investor' | ||
- | Here at Capipedia, our heart belongs to value investing. So, where do index funds fit in a philosophy dedicated to buying great companies at a discount? The answer is nuanced. | ||
- | ==== The " | ||
- | The world' | ||
- | ==== The Value Investor' | ||
- | Despite Buffett' | ||
- | When you buy an S&P 500 fund, you are forced to buy every company in the index at its current market price—the good, the bad, and the hideously overpriced. Most major indices, like the S&P 500, are a [[market-cap-weighted index]]. This means the fund automatically invests more money in the largest companies. During market bubbles, this can lead to you being heavily concentrated in the most popular and potentially overvalued stocks of the era, which is the exact opposite of what a value investor aims to do. A value investor hunts for treasure in the forgotten corners of the market; an index fund buys the entire shopping mall, including the flashy, overpriced boutiques at the front entrance. | ||
- | ===== Practical Takeaways ===== | ||
- | * For most people, a low-cost, broad-market index fund is one of the best investment vehicles ever created. It's a simple, effective, and time-tested way to build wealth. | ||
- | * It embodies a powerful "own the haystack" | ||
- | * For aspiring value investors, index funds can be an excellent way to keep your capital growing while you learn the craft of analyzing and valuing individual businesses. It provides a solid foundation from which you can begin your journey of becoming a more selective, value-oriented stock picker. | ||