It's really short sighted to say you can beat investment advisors 100%, especially the likes of certain hedge funds and private equity funds - not to mention the vanguard "index funds" you mentioned are managed funds by Vanguard
Not at all. There have been numerous studies conducted and all unanimously have found that index funds beat the vast majority of index managed funds. Also, Vanguard is an index fund, it is not actively managed. Australia just calls "mutual funds" (the correct and internationally accepted terminology) as "managed funds" (which is ripe for confusion, as evident in your post).
Over 16 years, index funds beat
88% of managed funds, according to a study conducted by Rick Ferri and Alex Benke.
http://www.rickferri.com/WhitePaper.pdf
Vanguard's own study show similar results, with index funds beating
85% of managed funds over a 15 year period.
https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/ISGIDX_032015_Secure.pdf
For comparison, if you chose investments by flipping coins, you would beat the index 50% of the time!
You might think, "hey at least 12-15% of managed funds outperform and produce positive alpha, right?" Wrong. Most of these lucky managed funds outperformed due to luck. (Remember: Just flipping coins will let you beat the index 50% of the time. Active managers get BEATEN by the index 88% of the time.)
What percentage of managed funds consistently outperform the market, and has a
statistically significant alpha? Take a guess first and then read on.
S&P conducted a study to try and find this.
A study by S&P Dow Jones Indices looked at 2,862 actively managed, domestic stock mutual funds and pulled out the ones that were top performers in the 12 months starting March 2009, when the market bottomed out and the bull market began.
It then looked at which of those funds stayed in the top 25 percent for four years, through March 2014. Jeff Sommer explained the results in the New York Times this weekend:
Just two funds — the Hodges Small Cap fund and the AMG SouthernSun Small Cap fund — managed to hold on to their berths in the top quarter every year for five years running. And for the 2,862 funds as a whole, that record is even a little worse than you would have expected from random chance alone.
In other words, if all of the managers of the 2,862 funds hadn’t bothered to try to pick stocks at all — if they had merely flipped coins — they would, as a group, probably have produced better numbers.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...any-mutual-funds-ever-beat-the-market-hardly/
Yes.
2 out of 2862.
That's less than 0.1%.
More fees has no correlation to what returns you can get - it can be higher or lower then your investment -depending on the fund and picks and a range of other factors.
That's incorrect, and has been proven correct on a both quantitative and qualitative level. Studies have shown a strong negative correlation between fees and returns.
http://econ.berkeley.edu/sites/default/files/Kremnitzer.pdf The higher fees, the lower net returns.
Why is this? It's because developed markets are very efficient, and the price of a security tends to almost perfectly reflect its risk / reward, relative to the overall asset class. There is very little "picking out hidden winners" that can be done, because these opportunities are arbitraged away by the market rapidly. So when active fund managers
cannot select better stocks except through luck, the more fees they charge the worse you'll do.
One book does not mean your more of an expert in investing compared to someone who's an expert in the field who's probably read x10 more books then you and had many more years of trading experience then you.
You are correct. Managed funds do outperform indexes by a very small amount (~0.15%), through exploiting the very small inefficiencies in markets. However, their fees (2-3.5%) completely decimate their alpha and result in a losing proposition.
I can confidently state that index investing will beat actively managed funds. There's a wealth of unanimous research and studies on the topic, go do some research. I haven't even mentioned the tax advantages to passive index investing (long term CGT vs short term CGT; the government is effectively giving you a 50% discount on your taxes if you go index!), the higher buy/sell spread of managed funds, etc.
It doesn't take more than several hours of research to conclude that you'd be a fool to invest in a managed fund. Unfortunately, a fool and his money is easily parted.