When Jack Bogle, founder of Vanguard Asset Management launched the first passive fund in 1975 he was called “un-American”. The financial industry was so against his plan to revolutionise the way that we invest, a campaign was mounted insinuating Bogle was unpatriotic and a fool.
Fast forward three decades and new money invested in passive funds is growing at much faster pace than actively managed funds. In the US last month, investors pulled $18 billion out of active funds, but invested $49 billion into passive funds. The story is similar this side of the pond, the fastest growing part of the market is passively managed funds – and in particular those which are “smart”, or “strategic” and offer investors access to a certain slice of the market.
With new money comes new fund launches, and more choice for investors – who now have to determine not only where they wish to invest; China stocks, commercial property, UK government bonds, but how they want to invest too. In the UK investors have access to more than 3,500 open-end funds, 300 investment trusts and more than 2,000 exchange traded funds. Offering access to the most remote of stock markets, commodities and bonds from as little as £50 a month.
Not all of these strategies are worth investing in – only a fraction are deemed worthy of a Gold, Silver or Bronze rating by Morningstar fund analysts, based on their past performance, cost to investors, and investing process.
Of the five measures Morningstar fund analysts use to determine whether a fund is best-in-class, price is the single most powerful predictor of future returns – and passive funds offer investors exposure to global assets on the cheap.
But what exactly is a passive fund? And are they better than actively-manged funds in all circumstances? When should you opt for passive, and what role should an ETF play in your portfolio? All this week we are running a Guide to Passive Investing to help you, the investor, make smart choices to meet your long-term investment goals.
Monday: What is Passive Investing?
What is an exchange traded fund and what is meant by a tracker?
What is the Difference Between an ETF and a Tracker?
What is the Difference Between Physical and Synthetically Backed ETFs?
Passive Investing: What is Smart Beta?
Tuesday: Why Cost Matters
The power of price when it comes to predicting future returns
How Fund Fees are the Best Predictor of Future Returns
The Benefits of Passive Funds in Your Investment Portfolio
Bogle: Go Passive in a Low Return World
Cost is Key When Comparing Gold Funds
Do Active Funds Have a Future?
Wednesday: Top Passive Funds for Your Portfolio
We highlight the best in class and explain how passive funds are rated
ETFs: A Better Way to Invest in Commercial Property?
3 Ways to Profit from the Emerging Market Rally
Vanguard's Bogle: Smart Beta Funds Do Not Work
Multi-asset Fund Manager Who Favours ETFs
Thursday: Which Active Managers Earn Their Fee?
While many active managers fail to beat the market, these reward investors
3 Best Performing UK Equity Funds
Gold Investors Have Doubled Their Money in 2016
3 Top Rated Funds with the Lowest Fees
3 Top Rated Trusts on a Discount
Friday: Blending Active and Passive in Your Portfolio
Pensions, portfolio construction and market challenges
Bogle: Don't Take on Too Much Risk in Retirement
How to Use ETFs in Your Investment Portfolio
When Should You Use Active Funds?