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The Danger of Index Funds

The Danger of Index Funds

The recent stock market decline  is a stark reminder to investors that there is risk in index funds. This is coming as a shock to many. After years of quantitative easing, artificially low-interest rates and, more recently, a “Trump bump,” index funds have enjoyed a long winning streak. Many investors have been lulled into a complacent belief that index funds are an ideal, low-cost investment – but those ideas are being challenged.

Investors are not as Diversified as They Think

One of the main selling points of index funds is their ability to provide investors with instant diversification, which is key to minimizing risk. In theory, an investment in an S&P 500 index fund or ETF buys a stake in each of the 500 companies that comprise the index. While that may seem diversified, the reality is that the majority of the index’s performance is driven by a handful of stocks.

For example, there were just 10 companies the FAANG stocks in addition to Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT). Visa, Inc.(NYSE:V), Mastercard, Inc. (NYSE:MA), Adobe Inc. (NASDAQ:ADBE) and NVIDIA Corp.(NASDAQ:NVDA) – that accounted for more than 100% of the gain in the S&P 500 for the first half of the year. It shouldn’t be surprising then, that this same group of stocks was the primary driver of the market selloff over the next few months.

Unexpected Concentration Risk

This concentration risk gets worse as more money flows into these index funds because fund managers are mandated to buy more shares of these over-weighted stocks, which drives their valuations even higher regardless of their fundamentals. This overvaluation introduces more risk to all existing types of market risk, which could result in a larger fall during a steep market decline. This lack of breadth in the index should concern investors, especially when you consider that index funds, by design, are almost certain to suffer 100% of the next market correction.


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Lack of Downside Protection

The significant disadvantage of index funds this reveals is the lack of downside protection. An investment in an index fund will give you the upside when the market is doing well, but it can leave you completely vulnerable to the downside. Unlike an individual stock portfolio, in which investors can control risk exposure, index investors have no opportunity to pare back their exposure to overvalued stocks, which can increase volatility beyond the comfort level of many index fund investors.

The Case for Individual Stocks

In a universe of nearly 9,000 companies with listed stocks, there are a good number sitting outside of the S&P 500 index that could be considered high quality without the bloated valuations. A key to stock selection is identifying well-managed companies with strong balance sheets selling at a deep discount to their intrinsic value. This not only raises the ceiling on their potential price appreciation, but it also raises the floor on potential price decreases. High-quality companies with high growth ceilings purchased at a fair value introduce less risk to a portfolio than overvalued companies regardless of their growth prospects.

As an example, Danaher Corp. (NYSE:DHR) is one of the better performing stocks versus the S&P 500 you’ve probably never heard of. The stock hides in a category – industrial conglomerate – not very high on the investors’ or the media’s radar. Manufacturing companies have generally been out of favor for a while. Yet, Danaher has grown steadily by making ordinary things profitably and its stock has outpaced the S&P 500 by 100% over the last several decades.

While these stocks will probably never be “headline” stocks that drive market performance, they are less likely to lead a down market. While a portfolio of high quality, undervalued stocks may not always outperform the overall market during up years, it is more likely to outperform the market in down years. It’s in those down years, or any year with strong volatility, when investors win by not losing. When you string enough of those wins together with average gains in the up years, you can achieve stable, long-term returns without having to endure the risk component in the broader market, which is important to investors who are near or in retirement.

Building a successful investment portfolio today requires taking both a global view and a long view. With the right portfolio of stocks, selected for their quality, value and long-term growth prospects, all that is needed is the patience and discipline to adhere to a long-term investment strategy.