Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
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Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
Continuing off topic...
It's also a good idea to visit one's safe deposit box annually and gently fondle the gold within so as to not be mistaken for a dead person.
It's also a good idea to visit one's safe deposit box annually and gently fondle the gold within so as to not be mistaken for a dead person.
Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
Barrett, you just HAD to use the word "fondle" didn't you??
This is on-topic sort of...a risk of passive investing that none of us ever thought of! Maybe I should make a point of sending a message annually on accounts where I haven't made any trades for the past year. Like, "Hey dude, when are you going to give us the option of buying gold in a retirement account?". Or simply, "I'm alive and well. Just not an active investor. Please don't give my hard-earned money to the government."
This is on-topic sort of...a risk of passive investing that none of us ever thought of! Maybe I should make a point of sending a message annually on accounts where I haven't made any trades for the past year. Like, "Hey dude, when are you going to give us the option of buying gold in a retirement account?". Or simply, "I'm alive and well. Just not an active investor. Please don't give my hard-earned money to the government."
Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
I happen to keep a silver ounce in my wallet purely for day-to-day fondling purposes. :Dsophie wrote:Barrett, you just HAD to use the word "fondle" didn't you??
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Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
No worries. And for the record I would classify myself as a semi-passive investor or more accurately a mechanical or algo investor. Here is what I actually believe:dualstow wrote:P.S.No offense meant to you, kbg, and apologies if any were taken. I'm just frustrated at the constant onslaught against the passive way.
At least we got a funny analogy from Tyler out of it. :afrosmiley:
1. You can only invest in consistently that which you have a strong belief in
2. Costs matter
3. Taxes matter
4. Consistency matters
While we've spent a bit of key stroke energy on this topic I'm not sure at the end of the day debating passive vs. active is all that helpful. My main point, which I'm not backing down from, is that how you invest and what in is an active decision. How to build an index is an active decision, how to manage an index is an active decision. The very fact you are in a PP vs. 60/40 (or whatever) was an active decision you made. How you transition your port from earning years to retirement years is an active decision...so be informed and educated about why you are doing whatever it is you are doing with your investments.
My journey...read Craig's book, Read Best Laid Plans...hmmm this is interesting. Study/backtest/study/backtest...wow, gold boosted the crap out of this portfolio's performance back in the 70s, that's interesting (but for me not compelling). Hmmm...always trails a stock oriented portfolio except for severe market events at which point it catches up to then start trailing again. Wonder if I could actually trade this thing? I think I would get frustrated during the long lagging periods. Study/backtest/study/backtest...holy crap why didn't I notice before what low volatility this portfolio has? Hmmm...what if we add a dash of leverage to make it more competitive with a bull market? Voila...the VP PP was born (and already discovered as it turns out)
After 3.5 years of investing in the above I'd say I'm doing well on 1, 3 and 4 of the above things. One day if my port gets big enough I can add in #2 using futures, but for now I'm stuck with 3x ETFs for implementation.
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Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
Good post. Ironically, at Bogleheads there is at least one thread about what might happen if too many people are into passive indexing. I saw a thread like it ten years ago, but nowadays the passive investing thing is really catching on. Doesn't worry me any. I'm proud of millennials for giving it a try.
And, as as been pointed out in one of those threads, there will naturally be a breaking point at which some people can't resist (re)turning to active.
There was an interesting article about the main guy at S&P in the Wall Street Journal. Well, the main guy responsible for changes in the S&P 500 components. Of course there's a whole committee and a lot of thought goes into it. Same case for those at the helm of actively managed funds, but the big difference for me is that those at the S&P don't have to worry about quarterly reports or shareholders dropping out.
Yes, we have to select an index fund, but I feel like I'm only active in that I'm actively choosing passive.
And, as as been pointed out in one of those threads, there will naturally be a breaking point at which some people can't resist (re)turning to active.
There was an interesting article about the main guy at S&P in the Wall Street Journal. Well, the main guy responsible for changes in the S&P 500 components. Of course there's a whole committee and a lot of thought goes into it. Same case for those at the helm of actively managed funds, but the big difference for me is that those at the S&P don't have to worry about quarterly reports or shareholders dropping out.
Yes, we have to select an index fund, but I feel like I'm only active in that I'm actively choosing passive.
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Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
It won't be a pretty, graceful return to active. It will be a panicked, disorderly, fire sale at -25% or -50% from the peak where they yank the IRA back from the brokerage and put it into an IRA at the bank, all in cash. They will pick the bottom pretty precisely.dualstow wrote:Good post. Ironically, at Bogleheads there is at least one thread about what might happen if too many people are into passive indexing. I saw a thread like it ten years ago, but nowadays the passive investing thing is really catching on. Doesn't worry me any. I'm proud of millennials for giving it a try.
And, as as been pointed out in one of those threads, there will naturally be a breaking point at which some people can't resist (re)turning to active.
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Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
And the peak can be identified fairly well by watching for Boglehead threads on how having only 100% in stocks is for wusses.ochotona wrote:It won't be a pretty, graceful return to active. It will be a panicked, disorderly, fire sale at -25% or -50% from the peak where they yank the IRA back from the brokerage and put it into an IRA at the bank, all in cash. They will pick the bottom pretty precisely.dualstow wrote:Good post. Ironically, at Bogleheads there is at least one thread about what might happen if too many people are into passive indexing. I saw a thread like it ten years ago, but nowadays the passive investing thing is really catching on. Doesn't worry me any. I'm proud of millennials for giving it a try.
And, as as been pointed out in one of those threads, there will naturally be a breaking point at which some people can't resist (re)turning to active.
That worked in 2008, anyway.
Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
About the S&P 500...it's really hard to beat because it guarantees two things. It invests only in the most successful companies in a pool where the majority do not even survive. It is CAP weighted, CAP weighting is a momentum strategy, and momentum is the oldest known proven (as much as one can prove something financial) market anomaly. And as a nice side benefit, it can be invested in now for a pittance. Assuming the US economy remains one of the best in the world I think it will continue to be a very difficult index and asset class to beat.
Of the two qualities my take is the first is the most important. For example, RSP even with higher fees has beaten the SPY over a long period of time now. RSP/equal weighting is a mean reversion strategy and mean reversion is a pretty dang good strategy when it comes to stocks.
Of the two qualities my take is the first is the most important. For example, RSP even with higher fees has beaten the SPY over a long period of time now. RSP/equal weighting is a mean reversion strategy and mean reversion is a pretty dang good strategy when it comes to stocks.
Re: Passive vs Active Investing, and role of the PP
Amen to that. Frequent portfolio switches are kind of the new active investing strategy with an element of fooling yourself into thinking you're passive investing because you're playing with index funds.Kbg wrote: 4. Consistency matters
Deciding on a portfolio is certainly an active process - although I think that's a different meaning from "active investing". English can be slippery that way. The point though is that once you've picked a portfolio, stick with it.