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re: Best vanguard fund

Posted on 4/24/13 at 6:37 pm to
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
85489 posts
Posted on 4/24/13 at 6:37 pm to
quote:

IMV, advisors know a lot of financial terms/lingo, but when it comes down to it they're just monkeys throwing darts at the big board. Indexing appears smarter and more cost effective.


"Indexing" to the S&P 500, for instance, is just a broad version of stock picking IMO. Not saying its goo or bad, but S&P has its own weighting methodology for tracking the 500 leading publicly traded US companies. It has become a bellwether for the US stock market and a benchmark for most equity funds, but in theory it is no different than any mutual fund that trades based on an algorithm.

Index funds are only as good as the underlying index methodology. There are plenty of actively-managed funds that have beaten index mutual funds and index ETFs. JMUEX, since 1996 (as far back as Yahoo had historical prices), has annualized returns of 7.19% with dividends reinvested. SPY and VFINX have 7.13 and 7.15% respectively. That is with all fees included. Additionally, JMUEX has 9.09% annualized returns over the last 10 years compared to 7.74 and 7.70 for SPY and VFINX respectively.

Just do your research.
Posted by bovine1
Walnut Ridge,AR via Tallulah,LA
Member since Dec 2004
1286 posts
Posted on 4/24/13 at 7:31 pm to
Wellesley has been good to me for a long time.
Posted by Janky
Team Primo
Member since Jun 2011
35957 posts
Posted on 4/24/13 at 8:12 pm to
quote:

slackster


Unh, unh! Oh no you didn't! Prepare for the wrath.

Posted by matthew25
Member since Jun 2012
9425 posts
Posted on 4/25/13 at 3:13 am to
As you suggested, I researched JMUEX. The minimum investment is $3 million.

Sorry, don't have that pocket change lying around.
Posted by Vols&Shaft83
Throbbing Member
Member since Dec 2012
69957 posts
Posted on 4/25/13 at 5:10 am to
quote:

"Indexing" to the S&P 500, for instance, is just a broad version of stock picking IMO. Not saying its goo or bad, but S&P has its own weighting methodology for tracking the 500 leading publicly traded US companies. It has become a bellwether for the US stock market and a benchmark for most equity funds, but in theory it is no different than any mutual fund that trades based on an algorithm.

Index funds are only as good as the underlying index methodology. There are plenty of actively-managed funds that have beaten index mutual funds and index ETFs. JMUEX, since 1996 (as far back as Yahoo had historical prices), has annualized returns of 7.19% with dividends reinvested. SPY and VFINX have 7.13 and 7.15% respectively. That is with all fees included. Additionally, JMUEX has 9.09% annualized returns over the last 10 years compared to 7.74 and 7.70 for SPY and VFINX respectively.

Just do your research.




This is my philosophy as well. I have several actively managed funds that have significantly outperformed the S&P over 5,10,20 year terms. I have 1 fund (AIVSX) that has averaged 12.35% since 1934. If you have Morningstar, you can find lots of funds that beat the indexes very quickly.


That being said, I still own Vanguard Index funds, in a taxable account. There's nothing wrong with doing a mix of Passive and Active management. IMO
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