How to Buy an Index Fund
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Compounding the confusion: Traditional index funds are “passive,” meaning that they don’t require the active daily management by a professional stock picker. (“Passive” may sound weak, but it isn’t; index funds have typically of most professional money managers while generally charging lower prices.) But now pros blur the lines by devising indexes, then launching funds that track the indexes they have helped create. They are dressing active strategies in index-fund clothing. Given so many options and so little clarity, how do you pick the right fund or funds?
How to Buy an Index Fund
Cut through the clutter to find what s right for you
iStock / Getty Images It’s a classic example of a simple thing gone crazy. In recent years countless financial experts have advised Americans to consider index funds — baskets of stocks or bonds that track the companies or investments that comprise market indexes — as a straightforward, low-cost, lower-risk way to invest without having to depend on a fund manager’s luck or skill in picking winners. Get instant access to members-only products and hundreds of discounts, a free second membership, and a subscription to AARP the Magazine. So what happened? A massive proliferation of index funds. Consider that there are 2,400 companies trading on the New York Stock Exchange and 2,500 U.S. index funds at latest count, according to the investment research firm Morningstar (some 60 funds tracking the popular S&P 500 stock index alone!). And although funds once focused on major indexes, such as those meant to represent all U.S. stocks or all non-U.S. stocks, hundreds of funds are now tracking narrow and sometimes obscure sections of the market, like natural gas distributors or water industry companies. Total U.S. index mutual funds and exchange-traded funds as of end of 2020. Includes all U.S.-domiciled open-end funds and ETFs. data from MORNINGSTAR; illustration, Nicolas Rapp “Indexing has gone from evolution to pollution,” says Rick Ferri, an investment adviser at Texas-based Ferri Investment Solutions. “Now everything has become an index.”Compounding the confusion: Traditional index funds are “passive,” meaning that they don’t require the active daily management by a professional stock picker. (“Passive” may sound weak, but it isn’t; index funds have typically of most professional money managers while generally charging lower prices.) But now pros blur the lines by devising indexes, then launching funds that track the indexes they have helped create. They are dressing active strategies in index-fund clothing. Given so many options and so little clarity, how do you pick the right fund or funds?