First, any financial market is a zero
sum game. This means that, after costs and taxes,
the average actively-managed dollar will always
underperform the average indexed dollar (and therefore
the markets in which all these dollars are invested).
This is a simple law of arithmetic that will
not go away in the future.
Second, the investment costs associated
with actively-managed mutual funds have generally
trended upward over the last decade. This has occurred
despite the fact that investors have poured huge
amounts of money into active funds over this period.
The resulting economies of scale would seem to dictate
that these funds should pass on the cost savings
to their investor-shareholders. This has not happened.
At the same time, the costs of investing in index
funds have trended downward as they have become
more popular with investors.
Naturally, there is always the possibility
that the costs of active mutual funds will decrease
in the future, thereby narrowing the cost gap with
index funds. But all evidence to date has shown
just the opposite trend - the costs of active funds
continue to go up and the costs of index funds continue
to go down.
Third, actively-managed mutual funds
typically generate relatively large amounts oftaxes
while index funds generate relatively small amounts.
Some of the resulting gap in performance caused
by taxes would seemingly be narrowed if the federal
government were to lower tax rates. Congress did
this at the end of July 1997 when it reduced the
maximum long term capital gains tax rate from 28%
on investments held more than one year to 20% on
investments held 18 months or longer. The tax bill
provides that in the year 2001 this rate will be
reduced to 18% for investments held five years
or longer.
Even though the lowering of tax rates
on long term capital gains is good news for actively-managed
mutual funds, it may be even better news for index
funds. The new tax law clearly encourages investors
to hold on to their investments for longer periods
of time. Thus, it favors indexers tax-wise because
they typically do not buy and sell their mutual
fund shares as often as active investors.
It is problematic that the future
direction of tax rates will be a downward one since
the federal government continues to face a myriad
of deep- rooted fiscal and budgetary problems."
So active investors who may be counting on Congress
to help them narrow the gap in after-tax performance
with indexers may be in for a long wait.
Fourth, a trend characterizing financial
markets the world over is that they are getting
more efficient. Thus, it isn't getting any easier
for active money managers to outperform such markets
- rather, it is increasingly difficult. Even many
prominent active money managers admit this. One
such manager is Ken Gregory who observes: "The
markets are getting more and more efficient. There's
so much more data available more quickly."
While many active money managers will
admit that it is getting more difficult to outperform
efficient markets, they quickly add that there are
plenty of opportunities to beat "inefficient
markets," especially those in many foreign
countries. However, the laws of arithmetic that
govern the zero sum game of efficient financial
markets also apply to inefficient markets. In both
kinds of markets, the average actively-managed dollar
will underperform the average indexed dollar, after
costs and taxes. This is why the high costs and
taxes that are usually present in inefficient financial
markets such as many foreign markets often adversely
impact investment performance more than the margin
by which a money manager is able to beat such markets.
For these reasons, it is likely
that in the future a given index fund will generate
net long term performance superior to most similarly
invested actively-managed mutual funds. This
is true for both stock and bond index funds. For
example, a Wilshire 5000 index fund will likely
outperform most actively-managed stock mutual funds
over the long run. It is even likelier that a bond
index fund that tracks the performance of a total
market bond index such as the Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index will outperform most active bond funds.
Furthermore, index funds invested in more specialized
asset classes such as foreign stocks will likely
beat most active funds that invest in foreign stocks.