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Harry M. Markowitz explains Portfolio Theory: what it is and how it's used from a top-down model from the asset classes to the investments. He covers Standard Deviation, Variance, Correlation, and Covariance. Markowitz also explains what happened in 2008 with Modern Portfolio Theory. (39 Min.)

Harry M. Markowitz - Portfolio Theory and 2008

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Harry Markowitz - Portfolio Theory Vs. Financial Engineering, and Their Roles in Financial Crises

The first step on the index funds journey is to recognize active investor behavior. If all investors were lined up in a row, could the active investors be identified? Active investors actively engage in stock picking, time picking (market timing), manager picking, and style picking.

Step 1: Active Investors - Podcast Interview with Mark Hebner

Mark Hebner explains the Nobel Laureates. Mark suggests a higher power of non-biased information from academics who carefully analyze data and have that data peer reviewed before it is published. Mark identifies the five basic concepts of the Modern Portfolio Theory.

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Small Caps Undervalued?

Rahul Seksaria
Friday, January 01, 1999

Small-cap indexing works best when small stock returns exceed those of large stocks. Should there be a resurgence of the small-caps, investors would be better off investing in small-cap index funds rather than an actively managed portfolio of small stocks.

The two main reasons:

  • Actively managed small-cap funds tend to have some degree of large-cap exposure for diversification purposes.
  • Lower fees charged by index funds do not detract as much from performance.

As large-cap growth stocks have led the bull run of the '90's, the S&P 500 index funds have beaten more than three-fourths of the active managers on average. The S&P 500 funds have by far been the most popular indexing vehicles used by investors. But as the large-cap leadership declines, active managers, who tend to be biased towards small and mid-sized stocks will most likely outperform the index.

"Actively managed funds always do better when small- and mid-cap stocks do better," says Don Phillips, CEO of fund-rating firm, Morningstar in an article published in "Mutual Funds, Mid-Year Forecast," August 1999.

But don't get him wrong; he does not mean that active managers will do better than indexing. He means to say that active managers will most likely beat an S&P 500 indexing strategy. But that does not rule out small-cap indexing.

Because of the recent dominance of large cap performance, large cap indexing has looked much better than one would expect while small cap indexing much worse. But a resurgence of small stocks will tilt the scales in favor of small-cap indexing at the expense of large-cap indexing. Since most small fund managers dabble in large cap stocks, they would have a hard time matching the return of a small-cap index fund.

"The advantage of indexing is even more impressive in small caps. Buy/sell spreads start at about 1 percent and increase as company size falls. This leads to an index advantage of about 2.5-3.0 percent," writes Dr. William Bernstein in his article, "When Indexing Fails."

Morningstar's numbers are further proof of indexing's long-term benefits. The average Small Blend Fund has an expense ratio of 1.44% and turnover of 72% while Vanguard's Small Cap Index Fund charges just 0.24% and has a turnover of about 29%.

It is impractical to ignore indexing in any market environment. Small-cap index funds make a lot of sense to capture the returns of the small-cap sector's imminent boom.

"The small-cap arena will be the best place to be over the next couple of years. It is coming off incredible undervaluation that really hasn't been seen in post-World War II market history," says Ed Larsen, Chief Equity Officer of the AIM Family of Funds.
                 

©1999 IndexFunds.com


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