I think you may be making some fundamental errors here. Active management underperforms in almost all scenarios.ChapInTokyo wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2024 1:27 amYou're very wise. After all, this particular company hasn't demonstrated their stock picking skill at this point and their expense ratio is several orders of magnitude higher than an index fund.
I'm keeping an eye on them though, bearing in mind this observation about the active/passive discussion in Jesper Rangvid's From Main Street to Wall Street - How the Economy Influences Stock Markets and What Investors Should Know (Oxford University Press, 2021). https://rangvid.com/MainStreetWallStreet.html
The active/passive discussion has a certain element of philosophical thinking to
it. For prices to exist, trading is needed. It is only when a trade happens that a price
is determined. For prices to adjust, someone must make an active decision. But, if
everybody is passive, who sets the price? Who distinguishes good firms from bad
firms? Basically, if everybody turns passive, who makes sure that capital markets
function? This has an interesting implication: the more passive investors there are,
the easier it is for active investors to outperform. If few investors follow firms, it
becomes relatively easier to gain informational advantages as an active investor,
and thus also relatively easier to outperform. Pastor & Stambaugh (2012) were
first to articulate this. So, when active managers struggle to demonstrate value-
for-money, there are good reasons why more and more investors become passive.
On the other hand, the more is invested passively, the higher is the likelihood that
an active manager will outperform.
Lesson 4. It is difficult to find outperforming active mutual funds. Hence, many
investors are turning passive. The more passive investors there are, however, the
easier it should be for active investors to outperform.
I would suggest this short video which summaries many of the key ideas surrounding the argument.
https://youtu.be/MOjS2zuQMdo