In todays WSJ there are two good articles on investing. Both emphasize the use of index funds:
Monday, August 2, 2010
2 Reports from WSJ - How would Dilbert Invest & Chance
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Long Term Investor: No Excuse not to Index - a table, a chart, a graph
The following table and chart are re-creations of a table and chart published in John Bogle's Common Sense On Mutual Funds. I believe that a short analysis will explain the argument for long term investors to simply hold the total market versus paying active managers to pick stocks or sectors.

A review of the chart shows that the average 1 year US stock market return since 1802 has been 6.5% (adjusted for inflation) with a one year high of 61.4 and a 1 year low of -48.4.
It also shows that as time passes the average return on the US stock market goes up and its highs and lows go down. For example the average of all 25 year holding periods is 6.9% with a high of 11.1% and a low of 2.7%. That means that any investor that held the US market for any 25 year period never had a 25 year return higher than 11.1% or lower than 2.7%. The numbers for a 50 year holding period are even more dramatic.
Now I need to bring in the definition of standard deviation to fully make the argument for holding (or indexing) the total US market.
Standard deviation measures the spread of the data that makes up the average. So a larger standard deviation means that the data that make up the average are spread farther apart than lower standard deviation averages. The chart and table above demonstrate this: in any 1 year the US market had returns that could have been anywhere between 61.4 and -48.4. But if one held the US market 50 years the spread of returns ranged between 3.9 and 9.9 (the 50 year holding period has a lower standard deviation).
Stay with me.
Statisticians have found that most averages have data that falls within 3 standard deviations (SD) of the average and that the data points make up a "bell shaped curve"
The graph below shows this idea. Generally, 68.2% of the data points that make up the average fall within 1 SD, 95.4% fall within 2 SD and 99.6% fall within 3 SD. Standard deviation is represented below by the Greek symbol sigma ( σ ).
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3.9%... 4.9% ...5.9%.. 6.9%.. 7.9% ..8.9%...9.9%
Average return for the corresponding standard deviation for 50 yr holding period
So what does all this mean for long term investors? It means this: If you had simply held an index fund of the total US market over the last 50 years you would have earned 6.9%. You would have had a fee of .20% (index funds are very cheap - there is no work to do) and your net after inflation return would have been 6.7%.
If you paid an advisor to actively manage your investments, or used an actively managed mutual fund, you had a 50% chance of being above average. Now factor in fees of 1.5% (average of mutual fund or personal advisor fees) and you would have had to had a return of greater than 8.2% (8.2% - 1.5% fees = 6.7%) to equal the return of holding the index and just being average.
Note: that actively managing means that someone is picking stocks and buying and selling based on what they feel is the best time to move in and out of certain stock positions.
If you earned an 8.2% return you would have been in the greater than 1 standard deviation range. Remember for the 50 year time period the standard deviation was 1%. A look at the graph above will show that your return would have been in the top 10 to 16% of returns.
Anything less than an 8.2% return and your performance is less than average after fees.
As an investor you need to ask: what are my odds of achieving higher than average net returns?
Finally, I want to emphasize that studies also show that the stock picker or mutual fund that does great one year or for several years does not maintain that position. So, to add to the above question, one needs to ask: can I consistently pick the advisor, mutual fund or stocks that will, net of fees, outperform the average of the US stock market.
My advise: ACCEPT AVERAGE and by doing that you are FAR ABOVE AVERAGE, NET OF FEES.
In further blogs we will explore what stocks tend to fall in the above average part of the bell shaped curve and why. Preview: they do not get there without a cost, and that cost is volatility - risk.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Yale Endowment: Superior Intelligence or Higher Risk
Are superior returns due to superior intelligence or adopting a riskier investment portfolio? This is a topic which I will explore continually. Larry Swedroe discusses David Swensen's performance at Yale.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Blog post on Indexing by Larry Swedroe
Short blog post by one of my favorite investing writers: Larry Swedroe.
In this post Larry gives an explanation of why investing with index funds results in superior returns.
Saturday, June 12, 2010
The Father of Modern Portfolio Theory Speaks
There is a collection of accepted learning in the field of financial economics known as Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). MPT is so commonplace now that it is hard to believe that it was revolutionary 50 years ago. That was when a Phd student at the University of Chicago, Harry Markowitz, argued that there was a trade off between risk and return. He demonstrated, mathematically, that investors are rewarded for the level of risk they take He also showed, that for every level of risk taken, there is a combination of investments that is the best combination available for that level of risk. Most of us who have investment portfolios have a portfolio that combines different asset classes (US Stocks, international stocks, bonds). This type of diversification was all started by Harry Markowitz.
The portfolio model Markowitz invented was based on the statistics of mean (average) return and the variance of the data points around the mean. These models would say something like - if you invest in a 100% stock portfolio you could have a one year return of negative 50% a couple times a century. A good financial advisor should explain that to an investor.
In 2008 the market experienced one of those couple times a century years. Some in the financial press shouted that MPT failed. I have to say, that when I would read or hear this I struggled, because 2008 was not outside what the models FOR PROPERLY DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIOS predicted. This is not to say that other models that the banks and others were using to make bets on the housing market did not fail, they did. But if you were an average investor who had a portfolio built on an MPT foundation, your return was within the prediction of the model.
Attached is a great interview with Markowitz in last months Journal of Financial Planning:
Here he explains and defends MPT. He is a modest genius who should be read and listened too.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Bogle on long term investing
In chapter one of Common Sense on Mutual Funds, John Bogle makes the following recommendation on stocks: He states that based on the historical evidence, if your definition of risk is the failure to earn a positive real return (your investments outperform the rate of inflation) over the long term, then stocks are actually less risky than bonds. He says that if you believe that the economy will be healthy over the long term, then the best way to outperform inflation is the stock market.
But, you must be prepared for periods of negative returns. Sometimes over several years.
It is important to note that Bogle defines risk as an investment that does not outperform inflation. Some investors cannot stomach the ups and downs of the stock market and for them, risk is having their investment earning negative returns. Outperforming inflation does not matter to them.
Also note that he is stressing this for the "long term investor." My advise on the definition of long term is 10 years or more. Therefore if you have need for your money in a period of less than 10 years the stock market may not be appropriate.
Finally, Bogle stresses the need to include Bonds in your investment portfolio. Bonds will generally act as insurance to your portfolio during poor stock market periods.
I will discuss portfolio allocations and risk issues in future blogs.
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Devil Take the Hindmost - history repeats
We have been here and seen this bubble cycle many times before. In his 1999 book, Devil Take the Hindmost, Edward Chancellor documents the long history of financial speculation. Early in the book he quotes John Stuart Mill. Writing in the 1800's, Mill wrote:
"Some accident which excites expectations of rising prices... sets speculation at work...In certain states of the public mind, such examples of rapid increase of fortune call forth numerous imitators, and speculation not only goes much beyond what is justified by the original grounds for expecting a rise in price, but extends itself to articles in which there never was any such ground; these however, rise like the rest as soon as speculation sets in. At periods of this kind, a great extension of credit takes place."
Chancellor goes on to write this short description of the behaviors of bubble cycles, many of which which are playing out today:
"The governments failure to regulate or supervise the new stock market and its stimulation of a lottery "fever" were key factors in the genesis and development of the 1690's boom. This was supplemented by the venality of members of Parliament who were more interested in profiting personally from the stock market than in opposing its excesses. As we shall see, a combination of laissez-fair and political corruption is a common feature of later manias - the most notable example being the Japanese "bubble economy" of the 1980's. When the boom ended and was followed by an economic crisis, the political situation changed. The selfish and shortsighted behavior of stockjobbers and promoters suggested a limit to the economic role of self-interest, and laissez-faire was replaced by regulation of both trade and the stock market.. Other manias have also been followed by a wave of popular, if rather hypocritical, revulsion against "greed."
After the crisis of 1696, stockjobbers became a symbol for the avarice of society at large, just as the "moneylenders" (President Franklin D. Roosevelt's phrase) were castigated in the 1930's"
For the long term investor it is important to understand that the history of capital markets is filled with incidents that are similar to the one we are living through. It is not different this time. Rather, it appears to be consistent with the historical record.
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