Wall Street Hype and Index Selection
When we first started investing we got carried away by all the Wall Street hype. Without doing our homework we purchased individual technology stocks. Needless to say it was very risky and unwise to do so. Add to it the high brokerage fees that were prevalent in those days.
We paid no attention to minimizing the management fees and simply went ahead and poured our money into the market! Neither were we aware of the issues involved in market timing.
Guiding Philosophy
Fortunately we became sensible very soon, in fact within a year! We started reading good books on long term investing. We contemplated on the philosophies and wisdom of investors who were successful over several decades. Soon we realized the value of having a healthy and balanced outlook in life - that includes all aspect of our daily lives including finances.
As a natural progression we developed our investing philosophies and since then followed them with discipline and diligence. We switched over to index investing - best expected return over long run with least amount of sweating. Besides it is ideal for investors starting out with small amount of money and yet achieve a broad market coverage with relatively lower risks.
Action
We figured that the investing steps we needed to follow were:
- Determine the indexes to invest in.
- Choose the index mutual funds to purchase that track the selected indexes.
- Recent years have produced another opportunity - Yes ETFs.
- Evaluate the merits of switching over to an ETF instead of an index mutual fund.
- Seek out the appropriate ETFs.
In this post we shall tackle the first action item that is choosing the right indexes. We are baffled at the plethora of indexes that are available these days. From a beginner’s standpoint it can truly be overwhelming. Besides choosing the wrong indexes can lead to overlapping of assets thereby throwing the target asset allocation out of balance. We may be blissfully unaware of it until some economic catastrophe strikes.
Instead of going into the details of each index and then arriving at the summary we would take a reverse approach to this issue. We would like to present the overall summary first. That way readers can focus only on the family of indexes they are interested in.
Overall Coverage
- Each family defines its own definition of Large Cap, Mid Cap, Small Cap and Micro Cap.
- Each family has its own mathematical model or definition of calculating an index.
- Choosing multiple indexes from different families would almost certainly lead to overlapping of assets thereby causing redundant coverage.
- The name of an index may not reveal much information. One ought to look under the hood at its definition and what it covers.
It seems challenging to begin with. Kindly share with all of us your own thoughts regarding these indexes - what strategy you adopted, which indexes you chose and why. Let everyone benefit from these experiences.










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