Here's my problem with an "index" fund.... The index is only a basket of names made up to "reflect" the particular sector a guy wants to invest in... let's say "financials" or "industrials" or "transportation". I have always advocated for small investors to invest in the companies and names they know and understand. And to buy "best of breed". But when you buy a basket of stocks -- you get just that - a basket. You get the good the bad and the ugly... and the ugly pulls down the performance of the good. So that gets you a basket of boring and I would ask you --- why bother? If you don't or can't figure out what the best of the best is in that sector -- then why invest in it if you don't even care to do a minimum of work.
If some of the companies that make up the index pay a dividend -- and many of the other names don't -- that just dilutes your dividend - because you have "X" amount of money invested but aren't getting much of a dividend --- compared to say -- the top company that pays a dividend.
Here's my bottom line opinion -- and this is for INVESTING 102.
If you have 100 grand - you probably don't own that many companies to start with --- 20 would be the max you should own... 20 names and that much to invest should get you well diversified -- with a dividend yield somewhere in the 4 to 5% range.
If you have 250K to 500K invested -- now you can start to put the bulk of your money into the above 20 or so names -- AND take some dough and add some "risk" assets.... in other words -- now you can put 10K EACH into some names like Tesla -- or NetFlix -- or <pick a name>. You can "afford" to take on some growth risk. If I had 250K --- I'd gamble with 50K max -- 500K and maybe I'd increase that t0 75K.
Once you get beyond these kinds of numbers to invest -- GD it! --- you'd better be real sharp about investments -- your returns - your risks - you should be into some real estate -- you should be taking an ACTIVE role in your money management. You can take on some higher paying (more risk) investments to get your returns up a bit since now you can afford to. You should have little debt - certainly shouldn't be making car payments or have ANY credit card debt.
Mutual Funds and Index Funds are a way for people to choose to NOT learn about investing - they're places for people to park money and forget about it - only to wake up 5 years later and realize they didn't do very well. They're just dumbed down "investments".
I just don't think that the guys that are reading this thread -- and trying to learn about investing from this thread - and then are finally branching out to read other stuff in order to learn more - "need" index funds in their accounts. The returns are just market returns without the dividend --- and if you're "only" getting a 2.5% dividend on the index fund -- and you could have bought the top name in that index and gotten 5% --- your total return is going to suck over time and that's not what we want.
For fun I went to Schwab and hit the research area -- they have a category for ETF's (exchange traded funds)... I chose LARGE VALUE - and then there's a button for ETF Select list - once you get there you can sort this -- so I sorted for highest dividend. The name comes up with (DIV) Global X SuperDividend.... it pays 6.08%
Here's the part I DO NOT LIKE -- they're only UP 7.59% in FIVE YEARS... THAT'S A HORRIBLE TOTAL RETURN.
If you just scroll down to their TOP TEN HOLDINGS -- you can now get the names that make up the fund. Check them out and buy the one or two that make sense. Bingo! LOL
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Originally Posted by sik68
Here is a relevant article posted on Forbes: Buffett's Bad Advice
The headline is obviously for click traffic, but he makes an interesting point that got me thinking. He argues that an index fund is NOT diversified, particularly in 'bubble phases', because high valuations in a particular sector skew the index away from representing the broader market.
He doesn't back this hypothesis with actual return scenarios, because he knows that he is just trying to stir the pot without backing anything up. It's pretty easy to see that over the long run, the S&P 500 tracks like the Russell 2000, tracks like the Wilshire 5000.
Granted, it's not the investing strategy of this thread, but index investing is another form of investing 101 that helps people grow their wealth to retire. I think he's doing a huge dis-service by scaring people away from even the most basic form of saving and earning compound interest. For some credibility, I wish he would have just said "buy an even broader index than the S&P if you're a risk averse investor" rather than spooking people away from Buffett's reasonable advice.
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