The bottom line: When trillions of dollars are managed by Wall Streeters charging high fees, it will usually be the managers who reap outsized profits, not the clients. Both large and small investors should stick with low-cost index funds. – Warren Buffet
In his annual letter to Berkshire Hath
The active funds portfolio delivered returns of 2.2% annualized over the first 9 years. While the index fund gave annualized returns of 7.1%. That means an amount of USD 1,000,000 invested in both would translate into USD 1.22 Million for the active funds basket and USD 1.85 Million for the index fund.
There is one year left for the bet to fully play out. Will the active portfolio catch up and beat the index fund?
Do refer to the full letter for more details here. Do go through the entire letter but if you are in a hurry, the wager details are from page 21-25.
What about you think about passive investments?
And now coming back to your own mutual fund portfolio, have you considered index funds over active funds?
They are not marketed with the same zeal as active funds. But there are good options out there for you to invest at a cost of just 11bps. Yes, that’s 11 paise for every Rs 100 invested. For active funds, this cost can be more than 20 times higher.
At Kuvera, we recommend only direct plans of mutual funds and where possible, low-cost index funds.
So you benefit not only from the low management expenses but also, from no commissions as there is no broker involved.
If you haven’t yet tried us yet, today is as good a day as any to do so. Simply visit kuvera.in and start your personalized plan today.