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How Index Funds Work
A market index is a collection of stocks designed to represent a market or sector. The most famous is the S&P 500 (500 large-cap U.S. companies).
An index fund simply holds all (or a representative sample) of the stocks in the index, weighted by their importance in the index.
Example: S&P 500 Index Fund
- The index has 500 stocks, weighted by market cap
- The fund holds all 500 stocks in the same weights
- If Apple is 7% of the index, the fund is 7% Apple
- When you buy the fund, you own fractional interest in all 500 stocks
Passive vs. Active Management
Passive (index) funds:
- Simply hold the index
- No manager trying to beat the market
- Minimal trading (only when index composition changes)
- Very low costs
- Returns match the index (guaranteed mediocrity)
Active funds:
- Manager picks stocks trying to beat the index
- Frequent trading based on manager analysis
- Higher costs (paying for research and trading)
- May beat or underperform the index
Research by S&P Dow Jones Indices found that 90% of active managers underperformed the S&P 500 over 15 years. This isn't chance—it's predictable math: fees reduce returns, and beating the market is hard.
The Cost Advantage
The primary advantage of index funds is cost:
Vanguard S&P 500 Index Fund (VFIAX):
- Expense ratio: 0.03% annually
- On $100,000: costs $30/year
Typical active large-cap fund:
- Expense ratio: 0.80% annually
- On $100,000: costs $800/year
40-year difference (at 8% return):
- 0.03% expense ratio: $2,172,000
- 0.80% expense ratio: $1,485,000
- Cost difference: $687,000
The 0.77% annual difference doesn't sound like much, but compounded over decades, it's massive. The active manager needs to beat the market by 0.77% annually just to match the index fund after fees—and most don't.
Common Index Funds
Large-cap U.S. stocks:
- S&P 500 (largest 500 U.S. companies)
- Russell 1000 (largest 1,000 U.S. companies)
Total U.S. market:
- Wilshire 5000 (all U.S. publicly traded stocks)
- Total market funds aim to capture large, mid, and small-cap
International:
- MSCI EAFE (developed markets outside U.S.)
- MSCI Emerging Markets (developing economies)
Bonds:
- Aggregate bond index (all major U.S. bonds)
- Treasury bond index (government bonds)
Blended:
- Target-date funds (automatically adjust from stocks to bonds as retirement approaches)
Index Fund Performance
Myth: Index funds guarantee average returns.
Reality: Index funds guarantee you'll match the index precisely (minus tiny fees). This is excellent because:
- The S&P 500's historical return is 10% annually (with volatility)
- Most investors expect to beat 10% and are disappointed
- Index funds guarantee you'll match this rather than chase mediocre performance
If 90% of active managers underperform the index, you have a 10% chance of picking one who beats it. The odds aren't in your favor. Index funds guarantee you're in the 100th percentile of passive management (you'll match the market); they can't guarantee you're in the top 10% of active management.
The Vanguard Effect
Vanguard pioneered index funds in 1976 when the concept was mocked. Today, Vanguard is the largest investor in the world because its index funds are so cheap and effective.
This industry-wide fee reduction has saved investors billions of dollars.
A Simple Winning Portfolio
Most investors should use index funds as their core holdings. A simple allocation:
70/30 portfolio (stocks/bonds):
- 70% VTI (Vanguard Total Market Index): Owns all U.S. stocks, large to small
- 20% VXUS (Vanguard International): Owns all international stocks
- 10% BND (Vanguard Bond Index): Owns all major U.S. bonds
This is:
- Globally diversified (U.S., international)
- Across all market caps (large, mid, small)
- Cost: 0.04% average expense ratio
- Simple to rebalance (three funds)
- Historically returned ~8-9% annually
The Criticism of Index Funds
1. You can't beat the market: True, but most people don't. Settling for market returns is better than trying and failing.
2. Index funds concentrate in mega-cap companies: Partially true. The S&P 500 is 25% in the top 10 stocks. But this reflects market reality, not index fund design.
3. Index fund growth threatens market efficiency: Theoretically, if everyone indexed, active managers would disappear and price discovery would break. In practice, enough active managers exist to maintain market efficiency.
Why Index Funds Win
- Low costs: Hard to beat 0.03% fees
- Tax efficiency: Low turnover = fewer taxable events
- Simplicity: No need to research funds
- Diversification: Instant ownership of hundreds/thousands of securities
- Math: Hard to beat the market; easier to match it
The Bottom Line
Index funds are the optimal choice for most investors. They guarantee market returns, which historically exceed 90% of active investors. Combine low-cost index funds with a simple asset allocation and you've solved the investment problem.
Warren Buffett's famous recommendation to ordinary investors: invest in a low-cost S&P 500 index fund and forget about it. It's hard to do better than this advice.





