https://www.marketreview.com/news/why-so-many-mutual-funds-cant-beat-the-indexes/Why So Many Mutual Funds Can’t Beat the Indexes
Investing in stock indexes doesn’t require any skill in stock picking at all. How can no skill beat the presumed skill of fund managers? They obviously aren’t using much skill.
Actively managed mutual funds have quite a few limitations versus what we can do with our own accounts as individual investors. If we are considering investing in an active fund, it’s always important to look at what other approaches we could take instead, and how active mutual fund investing stacks up to these other approaches, so we will at least be in a better position to decide.
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Give me active & well-allocated/managed, low-cost funds and selected quality individual stocks, let me pull down roughtly 6-8% growth rate per year with a portfolio diversified according to MY analytical due diligence, and I'll be happy. I don't want or *need* to wring every single nickel out of the market just because it's there for the taking. If that portfolio eeks out 10% or more because of the "rising tide" phenomenon, so be it, I won't complain. But I refuse to use indexes as the arbitrary sign of my investing 'success' or goal posts.
When stocks go down 5+% you will see the crash is coming soon, valuations are too high. Stocks go up, valuations are too high and a crash may come soon.
Every several weeks...the following 10 funds have beaten the index...or what should you buy now...SS will be out of money...value will beat growth soon...EM will beat US stocks...Then recycle again.
Basically, I think that over 95% of the articles are useless.
Derf
That's why over the last fifteen years the Vanguard Total Stock Market Fund has beaten 85% of its competitors. An active manager in the short-term might have one or two blowout years where they best the market by a wide margin, but sooner or later most slip up while that fee drag they have is like clockwork, deducting upwards of one percentage point a year from returns. It is the certainty of the fee drag versus the quasi-randomness of outperformance that makes index funds so hard to beat.