[Wall Street Uncle] Index Investing Strategy Myth vs Reality - Complete Guide in One Video!

월가아재의 과학적 투자
주식 투자초보 재테크

Transcript

00:00:00For example,
00:00:00the Nasdaq took 15 years to recover to its previous high after the dot-com bubble.
00:00:04The KOSPI took 11 years to recover after the 1994 downturn,
00:00:08and the Nikkei index hit 39,
00:00:10500 in 1990,
00:00:11yet even 30 years later it's only at 27,
00:00:14800.
00:00:15Even after 30 years, it hasn't recovered, right?
00:00:17Hello, this is Uncle Today.
00:00:26Today we'll be discussing index tracking strategies.
00:00:29The subtitle is: What would happen if everyone tracked the index?
00:00:31Actually,
00:00:32since I started YouTube,
00:00:34for about 8 months straight,
00:00:36there was someone persistently asking me to cover index tracking.
00:00:40I think their nickname was something like IU fan or just IU,
00:00:44and they're an analytical male viewer.
00:00:47They kept asking me to cover it,
00:00:49and eventually seemed to be getting a bit frustrated,
00:00:53so I thought I should cover this topic quickly for them..
00:00:58So today's agenda goes like this: what index tracking is,
00:01:01how to do it,
00:01:02the assumptions underlying the strategy,
00:01:04verifying those assumptions,
00:01:06four things to keep in mind when implementing the strategy,
00:01:09the true meaning of it,
00:01:11and then ways to improve returns,
00:01:13and so on.
00:01:14Finally,
00:01:14since passive investing is extremely popular these days,
00:01:17we'll also discuss the market risks associated with this concentration trend.
00:01:21Let's start with the basics. First, what is an index?
00:01:24An index is basically a group of financial products bundled together.
00:01:28So a stock index is a collection of stocks bundled together.
00:01:31The S&P 500 index,
00:01:32for example,
00:01:33is created by S&P using their own criteria to identify what they consider to be the 500 largest corporations representing America,
00:01:40and then they bundle these 500 companies together to create the S&P 500 index.
00:01:45When calculating an index,
00:01:47typically the index starts at a value of 100 when it was first created,
00:01:51and then rises as the companies that make it up go up in value.
00:01:55Not all indices work this way,
00:01:57but the KOSPI index,
00:01:58for example,
00:01:59started at 100 in the 1980s and is now at 3,
00:02:02200,
00:02:02which means it's gone up 32 times over 31 years.
00:02:05So even with indices like the S&P 500 or KOSPI,
00:02:07the constituent companies have different market capitalizations.
00:02:10Since the returns of the individual companies differ,
00:02:14how do we calculate the index return?
00:02:16To illustrate this,
00:02:17let me give you a simple example with an index that only has two constituent companies,
00:02:22A and B.
00:02:22The first method is to take a simple average with equal weighting.
00:02:26That is, you simply average the returns equally.
00:02:29If A goes up 10% and B goes up 20%,
00:02:31the index goes up 15%,
00:02:33regardless of their relative sizes.
00:02:35That's how the Dow Jones index is calculated.
00:02:38The second method is to use a weighted average based on market capitalization.
00:02:41If company B has twice the market cap of company A,
00:02:45then B gets twice the weight,
00:02:46so the index would go up 16.66%.
00:02:49Most major indices like the S&P 500,
00:02:51Nasdaq,
00:02:52and Russell 2000 use market-cap weighted averaging.
00:02:56Some also use weighted averages based on trading volume.
00:02:59In other words,
00:03:00more heavily traded stocks get higher weights,
00:03:03and sometimes fundamental metrics are used for weighting as well.
00:03:07Though that's not very common.
00:03:08So an index tracking strategy is when you buy stocks of the companies that make up an index in the exact same proportions,
00:03:14thereby achieving returns that match the index's returns.
00:03:17This is called index investing,
00:03:19and you can either buy an index fund or an index ETF.
00:03:23Or if you're willing to go through the hassle,
00:03:24you can construct the index yourself.
00:03:26But in the case of the S&P 500,
00:03:27I'd have to buy all 500 stocks in my portfolio according to their market cap weighting,
00:03:32which is extremely tedious.
00:03:33That's why index ETFs exist to do that work for you.
00:03:37That's how you should think of it.
00:03:39These kinds of funds or ETFs are called passive funds.
00:03:42It's passive investing.
00:03:43Passive investing.
00:03:44The opposite is active investing.
00:03:46Typically,
00:03:47when you invest in a fund,
00:03:48if that fund manager does their own research and the fund is managed at the fund manager's discretion,
00:03:54it's called an active fund..
00:03:56Index funds and index ETFs,
00:03:57on the other hand,
00:03:58aren't managed at the fund manager's discretion—they simply replicate the index composition,
00:04:03so they're called passive investing.
00:04:05So if you want to track the S&P 500,
00:04:07you'd buy the 500 constituent companies according to their market-cap weightings.
00:04:12Earlier I mentioned that the Dow Jones index isn't based on market cap but on averaging returns,
00:04:17so when investing in the Dow,
00:04:18you'd just buy the companies equally weighted.
00:04:21Since it's difficult for individuals to do this purchasing themselves,
00:04:25that's why we buy index funds and ETFs.
00:04:27Index ETFs typically have lower fees than index funds,
00:04:29so you should just buy ETFs..
00:04:31Representative index ETFs include SPY, QQQ, and IWM.
00:04:35So is an index tracking strategy good?
00:04:37Absolutely.
00:04:38It's very good..
00:04:39I made a mistake in an earlier episode when I said index tracking ranked 50th.
00:04:43The truth is,
00:04:44if you consistently rank 50th at each moment,
00:04:46even active funds incur continuous fees and produce inconsistent results,
00:04:50so index tracking strategies often end up in the top 25% or better when looking at cumulative returns..
00:04:56In various research studies,
00:04:58index tracking strategies show very strong performance compared to active funds.
00:05:03But there's no perfect strategy in the world.
00:05:05So let's examine the assumptions embedded in the index tracking strategy,
00:05:09and also look at four important things to keep in mind.
00:05:11First,
00:05:12what's the assumption underlying index tracking strategies?
00:05:14It assumes the stock market will trend upward over the long term,
00:05:16right??
00:05:17But is this an absolute truth? It's not.
00:05:19If the economy continues to grow,
00:05:21the money supply increases,
00:05:22and we avoid deflation,
00:05:23then generally yes.
00:05:25But this isn't an absolute truth like 'the sun rises in the east.'
00:05:29For example,
00:05:29the Nasdaq took 15 years to recover to its previous high after the dot-com bubble.
00:05:33The KOSPI took 11 years after the 1994 downturn,
00:05:36and after reaching 2,
00:05:37000 in 2007,
00:05:38it took 13 years before it meaningfully broke out of its consolidation range.
00:05:43The Nikkei index even hit 39,
00:05:45500 in 1990,
00:05:46and 30 years later it's still only at 27,
00:05:50800.
00:05:50Even after 30 years, it hasn't recovered, right?
00:05:52Then there's Italy's MIB index, which hit 48,500 in 2000.
00:05:5720 years later, it's at only 19,000—less than half.
00:06:02The Shanghai Composite hit 5,
00:06:04900 in 2007,
00:06:05and 14 years later,
00:06:07it's at 3,
00:06:07400..
00:06:08These two indices haven't recovered at all, have they?
00:06:11And all the index values I mentioned above don't even account for inflation.
00:06:15So among the US,
00:06:16South Korea,
00:06:16Japan,
00:06:17Italy,
00:06:17and China,
00:06:18only the US and KOSPI are trending upward over the long term,
00:06:21right?
00:06:21And KOSPI only went up recently due to a huge boom,
00:06:24so in reality,
00:06:25the only market that has consistently and historically proven to trend upward is the US market.
00:06:30But have you ever thought about this?
00:06:33Why does only the US stock index trend upward over the long term?
00:06:36To think about this,
00:06:37let me conduct a very simple thought experiment.
00:06:39Imagine there's a small village with only 1 million won in cash,
00:06:42and assume only cash can be used as money.
00:06:44Then the maximum price for anything in that village is 1 million won.
00:06:47Stocks also can't go above 1 million won.
00:06:49But while the cash doesn't increase, goods do increase.
00:06:52Then deflation would occur, right?
00:06:53Prices of goods would fall..
00:06:55Conversely,
00:06:55if cash keeps increasing while goods don't increase.
00:06:58Then the prices of goods would rise, resulting in inflation.
00:07:01But what if a bank is created?
00:07:03Chulsu has 1 million won,
00:07:04and he deposits it in the bank for 1 million won.
00:07:07Then the bank lends 900,000 won to Young-hee.
00:07:10And Young-hee is trying to spend that 900,000 won.
00:07:13Then in effect,
00:07:13the money has increased to 1.9 million won,
00:07:15hasn't it?
00:07:15The cash itself hasn't increased,
00:07:17but the money circulating in the economy has increased.
00:07:20This is called credit expansion.
00:07:21When you think about why only the US index trends upward over the long term,
00:07:25it's because money increases..
00:07:27Money increases either by printing more currency or through credit expansion—it's one or the other.
00:07:32The US holds the dollar as the reserve currency,
00:07:35making it one of the few countries that can continuously print dollars,
00:07:39and the interest rate trend has been declining for decades..
00:07:42And the lower interest rates go,
00:07:44the more capacity there is for debt,
00:07:45or in other words,
00:07:46for credit expansion.
00:07:47These factors have played a huge role in why only the US index trends upward over the long term.
00:07:52But you might say,
00:07:54hasn't the KOSPI also trended upward until now?
00:07:57That's true.
00:07:57Even if a country isn't the reserve currency issuer,
00:07:59it can print money in certain situations..
00:08:00Without causing inflation,
00:08:02which happens when goods also increase—in other words,
00:08:04when the economy is still growing a lot.
00:08:06When you print currency in proportion to the growth in economic size,
00:08:10you won't see as much inflation..
00:08:12Second,
00:08:12when credit expansion is possible through a low interest rate environment.
00:08:16Of course, a low rate environment isn't exclusive to the US.
00:08:19Third,
00:08:20when there's still debt capacity,
00:08:21when you can expand credit by increasing debt—by borrowing more.
00:08:25The bank borrows using Chulsu's 100 million won deposit,
00:08:28increasing the money in the village..
00:08:30When you expand debt like that,
00:08:31credit expansion becomes possible.
00:08:33Or there are times when there's financial market opening or structural improvements on the path to becoming a developed nation.
00:08:38Usually,
00:08:39when countries transition from middle-income to developed nations,
00:08:42financial markets become more sophisticated.
00:08:44In Korea's case,
00:08:44as real estate dominance declined,
00:08:46people's eyes were opened to stock investment,
00:08:48and funds increasingly flowed into stocks..
00:08:50During such periods, upward momentum does emerge.
00:08:53But BRICS countries and many other middle-income countries show cases where stock markets briefly flourished on the path to becoming developed,
00:09:00and then that became the historical high point.
00:09:03Of course,
00:09:03I'm not saying that's the case with KOSPI now; historically,
00:09:05that's how these examples have played out.
00:09:07Fifth,
00:09:08credit expansion can also occur due to the Fed's dollar liquidity.
00:09:11Over the past 12 years,
00:09:12the Fed has pumped tremendous dollar liquidity into the world through quantitative easing,
00:09:17so indices have benefited and risen.
00:09:19So ultimately,
00:09:20Korea also underwent financial modernization where the perception shifted from real estate to stocks,
00:09:25and there were regulatory reforms in capital markets.
00:09:29But without growth to back it up,
00:09:30long-term upward trends like the US stock market will be difficult..
00:09:35So the truth about stocks always trending upward is this: because the dollar is the reserve currency,
00:09:40because it keeps printing dollars,
00:09:42and because interest rates have trended downward for decades.
00:09:45But now that we're at zero interest rates,
00:09:48you might ask,
00:09:48isn't further decline impossible?
00:09:51That's why the Fed started quantitative easing..
00:09:54They just print money,
00:09:55and by pushing real interest rates even lower,
00:09:57there's an additional credit expansion effect,
00:09:59which is why stock indices have surged dramatically from last year through this year.
00:10:03But the end of this quantitative easing period is uncharted territory.
00:10:07Because in history,
00:10:08the only time we had a zero interest rate period was right after the Great Depression,
00:10:12and generalizing from just one case is difficult.
00:10:15When the tools we're currently using run out of steam,
00:10:18moving past that point will involve completely different logic and movements than we've seen for the past few decades,
00:10:24I think..
00:10:24I really think there will come a day when the sun sets in the east in the stock market too.
00:10:29But of course,
00:10:30I don't know when the end of this era will come..
00:10:33It could be quite far in the future.
00:10:3410, 20, 30 years?
00:10:36But I think I'll probably witness it once in my lifetime.
00:10:40But anticipating or acting on these things seems too complicated anyway.
00:10:44The bottom line is: stocks don't unconditionally and inevitably trend upward like some absolute truth..
00:10:49They trended upward because of this context that existed.
00:10:54But when you look across different countries,
00:10:57there are many nations where stocks haven't trended upward.
00:11:00Keep those as cautionary points in mind.
00:11:03But wait,
00:11:04that sounds scary—are you saying I shouldn't do index tracking?
00:11:07No, that's not it..
00:11:08But you must keep four things in mind.
00:11:10First is the weighting method for averaging,
00:11:13second is to invest long-term,
00:11:14third is to be careful with leverage,
00:11:16and fourth is peace of mind.
00:11:18Keep these four things in mind when pursuing an index tracking strategy..
00:11:22First thing to remember: don't put a large lump sum into the market all at once at a single point in time.
00:11:27You shouldn't think,
00:11:28'I watched this video and decided to start index tracking.
00:11:31I've saved up about 250 million won so far,
00:11:33so tomorrow I'll open a stock account and invest all 250 million into the index.' Absolutely don't do that..
00:11:38Because as I showed with examples earlier using the Japanese,
00:11:42Italian,
00:11:42and Shanghai indices,
00:11:43if your entry point is bad,
00:11:45it can take 15 to 30 years just to recover your original investment.
00:11:49So don't do it that way.
00:11:50There's a method called dollar-cost averaging..
00:11:53It's called 'dollar weighting,
00:11:54' and you continuously buy a fixed amount at regular intervals,
00:11:57always the same amount.
00:11:58If you decide to buy 1 million won per month,
00:12:00when the stock price is 100,
00:12:01000 won you buy 10 shares,
00:12:03and when it's 10,
00:12:03000 won you buy 100 shares.
00:12:05If instead of setting a fixed amount you set a fixed number of shares—say you buy 10 shares every month—and the first month the price is 100,
00:12:12000 won and the second month it's 10,
00:12:14000 won,
00:12:15your average purchase price becomes 55,
00:12:17000 won per share.
00:12:18But if you buy a fixed amount like X million won per month,
00:12:21in the case above,
00:12:22your average purchase price drops to 18,
00:12:24000 won per share.
00:12:25Because when you buy a fixed amount every month like this,
00:12:29when the stock price is high you buy fewer shares,
00:12:32and when it's low you buy more shares,
00:12:34so your per-share cost average decreases.
00:12:37So why is fixed installment investing better than investing a lump sum all at once?
00:12:41Now the gray line is the Nikkei index.
00:12:42Let me show you what would happen if you invested one year before the Nikkei's peak..
00:12:47The index is at around 27,000 right now.
00:12:49You think to yourself: I should start index tracking..
00:12:51That's what you think.
00:12:52If you invested a lump sum of 100 million won at that point,
00:12:56you'd break even after 400 months—almost 33 years.
00:12:58Now the yellow line shows what happens when you just put in the 100 million lump sum.
00:13:02If you invest 100 million,
00:13:03it moves proportionally with the index like this,
00:13:05and by this year you'd roughly break even..
00:13:07But instead of doing that,
00:13:09let's say it's 400 months,
00:13:10so you divide 100 million by 400 and invest 250,
00:13:13000 won monthly.
00:13:14Then the brown line shows that over 33 years you'd make an 82% gain.
00:13:19But at first,
00:13:20you'd have idle cash sitting around,
00:13:21wouldn't you?
00:13:22If you invest 250,
00:13:23000 won,
00:13:23then 99.75 million won sits as idle cash.
00:13:26So let's say we apply a very conservative 1.2% annual interest to that idle cash..
00:13:32That's very conservative,
00:13:33but even so,
00:13:34the lump sum ends up breaking even,
00:13:36while the fixed installment method yields not 82% but 108% returns.
00:13:40But does that mean fixed installment is always better?
00:13:42Not exactly..
00:13:43It's not absolutely superior; it's just safer.
00:13:46If the Nikkei had crashed in the 1990s and hit bottom around 8,
00:13:51000 in 2003,
00:13:52investing a lump sum at that point would have yielded 248% returns in 18 years,
00:13:57but the fixed installment method would only yield 74%..
00:14:01So the lump sum would be better in that case.
00:14:03So the conclusion we can draw here is: invest small amounts regularly,
00:14:07but deploy your large reserves when a major crash occurs.
00:14:10That's the kind of conclusion we can reach.
00:14:12These days when the stock market is doing exceptionally well,
00:14:15many stock market beginners are starting to invest in stocks for the first time.
00:14:19Individual stocks seem risky,
00:14:21but index tracking seems safer.
00:14:24So they think they'll buy ETFs.
00:14:26And since index tracking seems safe,
00:14:28they invest the money they've been saving.
00:14:30I don't recommend doing that.
00:14:32Because the stock market has been very good up until now,
00:14:36if you're planning to start index tracking during such a strong market,
00:14:40you should invest small amounts for now while keeping the rest in cash,
00:14:44savings,
00:14:45or bonds,
00:14:45and then invest those reserves bit by bit when the next crash comes.
00:14:50So if you're young and don't have any large savings,
00:14:53you can just start investing a small fixed amount every month now.
00:14:57If you do have large savings,
00:14:59you can do small monthly installments and periodically deploy additional reserves during crashes..
00:15:05So the first thing to remember is: when starting out,
00:15:08don't put your large reserves into index tracking.
00:15:10The second thing to remember is that you need to invest long-term.
00:15:13Index tracking is only for those who have plenty of time before they need this money.
00:15:20Why?
00:15:20Even with regular investing,
00:15:22you can have a market crash after you've invested a lot..
00:15:25But as I mentioned earlier,
00:15:27there have been periods where the KOSPI or NASDAQ took 10 to 15 years just to break even.
00:15:34So I don't recommend pure index tracking for those with less than 15 years until retirement.
00:15:40If you're young,
00:15:41you can go all-in on stocks,
00:15:42but for those approaching retirement,
00:15:45I recommend investing mainly in bonds and only allocating a portion to index tracking.
00:15:50The third thing to keep in mind is to be careful with leverage.
00:15:54If you're not a day trader,
00:15:56avoid 3x leverage almost completely.
00:15:58Even if you want to use leverage,
00:16:00the maximum should be around 2x.
00:16:03Historically, crashes of 30% can happen, like during COVID.
00:16:08Those using 3x leverage basically had their capital wiped out at that point.
00:16:13So you could face bankruptcy, making recovery impossible.
00:16:17Leverage should never exceed 2x,
00:16:19and you need to know that leverage isn't free.
00:16:23As I explained in my leveraged ETF video,
00:16:26there's the daily rebalancing issue.
00:16:28Your money gets eaten away in sideways markets.
00:16:30For example, let's say you use 3x leverage.
00:16:33Let's say the stock index goes from 100 to 90,
00:16:36then back to 100.
00:16:37That's a 10% drop, then an 11% gain to get back to 100.
00:16:42But what happens if I'm using 3x leverage?
00:16:45When it drops from 100 to 90, I drop from 100 to 70.
00:16:48When it goes from 90 to 100, it rises 11%, so I rise 33%.
00:16:5230% increase from 70 gives you about 93.
00:16:56The index goes from 100 to 90 and back to 100,
00:16:59but with 3x leverage,
00:17:01I go from 100 to 70 and only reach 93.
00:17:03That's how your money gets eaten away.
00:17:05Because leveraged ETFs don't triple your returns over a period—they triple your daily returns.
00:17:14So when my capital drops to 70 and gets reduced through rebalancing,
00:17:18the index recovers but I don't.
00:17:20That's what I explained in my leveraged ETF video,
00:17:24but beyond that issue,
00:17:26there are hidden fees.
00:17:27Many of you know stocks like FNGU and FANG—they're 3x leveraged,
00:17:33and most ETFs have fees,
00:17:35right?
00:17:35Typically ETFs charge less than 1%, but FNGU charges 0.95%.
00:17:41But there's also borrowing costs.
00:17:43Think about it—if I buy 1 million won worth of ETF,
00:17:46I get 3 million won in exposure.
00:17:48So 2 million won gets borrowed from somewhere.
00:17:52From the ETF operator.
00:17:53And those borrowing costs are quite high.
00:17:55Not outrageously high, but higher than you'd expect.
00:17:58So leveraged ETFs are essentially borrowing.
00:18:00This is from FNGU's documents—the expense ratio or just the management fee is 0.95%,
00:18:07right?
00:18:08Then there's the daily financing rate.
00:18:10This is the borrowing cost—when you buy 1 million won of this ETF,
00:18:14the ETF itself manages 3 million won,
00:18:16so someone lends the 2 million won.
00:18:19The issuer is Montreal Bank.
00:18:21So the 2 million won gets borrowed from Montreal Bank.
00:18:24This borrowing rate is the Fed Fund Rate plus 1%.
00:18:29Right now,
00:18:30because of COVID,
00:18:31it's basically 0.25%,
00:18:33so you might think it's nothing,
00:18:35but in 2019 before COVID,
00:18:37if the Fed rate was around 2%,
00:18:39then the daily financing rate would be 3%.
00:18:43But you borrowed 2x your capital.
00:18:45You borrowed 2 million won against 1 million won,
00:18:48so you multiply by 2.
00:18:50So 3% times 2 equals 6%.
00:18:53Then add the 0.95% fee and you're paying 6.95%,
00:18:57almost 7% annually while holding this.
00:19:01It bleeds out daily.
00:19:037% annualized daily is enormous.
00:19:06You're giving up 7%,
00:19:08which defeats the purpose of index tracking,
00:19:11so even if the base rate is just 1-2%,
00:19:14the fees are 5-7%.
00:19:16If the base rate rises to 3%, the fees would be almost 9%.
00:19:21And that's before accounting for the money lost through rebalancing,
00:19:26so leveraged ETFs are best avoided.
00:19:28That's why after I posted my leveraged ETF video,
00:19:31there was some misunderstanding—I posted that video because leveraged ETFs leak money,
00:19:36so they're bad.
00:19:37Or some people say leveraged ETFs perform better long-term,
00:19:41so they're good.
00:19:42With these different opinions,
00:19:45I tried to clarify that leveraged ETFs lose money in sideways markets but outperform regular 1x ETFs by more than 3x in trending markets.
00:19:55They have compounding effects,
00:19:57so I gave that technical explanation,
00:19:59but realistically,
00:20:00markets are sideways most of the time,
00:20:02so leveraged ETFs are at a disadvantage.
00:20:04There are markets where leveraged ETFs have an advantage.
00:20:07But those times are rare.
00:20:10So keep that in mind,
00:20:12and if you're going to use leveraged ETFs,
00:20:14it's better to borrow at low rates and invest with regular leverage.
00:20:18But when I say that,
00:20:20it might sound like I'm recommending debt investing,
00:20:24which I absolutely am not.
00:20:26Never do it,
00:20:27but if you insist on leveraged ETFs,
00:20:30it's more advantageous than using leveraged ETFs to borrow instead.
00:20:35Of course you shouldn't do either,
00:20:37but the reason is that if you use 100 million won in 3x leveraged ETFs,
00:20:41recovery becomes impossible in a big crash.
00:20:43For example,
00:20:44if the market drops 20%,
00:20:46I drop 60%,
00:20:46leaving me with 40 million won.
00:20:48Then for that 40 million to become 100 million,
00:20:52it needs to rise 150%.
00:20:53If the market rises 50%,
00:20:55I rise 150%,
00:20:56getting back to 100 million.
00:20:58But instead of using 100 million won for 3x leveraged ETFs,
00:21:02if I can borrow at low rates,
00:21:03I borrow 200 million won and invest 300 million won in regular leverage-free ETFs,
00:21:08then when the market drops 20%,
00:21:10300 million becomes 240 million.
00:21:12Then if the market only rises 25%,
00:21:15I can recover the 300 million.
00:21:17So borrowing to invest in regular ETFs beats leveraged ETFs.
00:21:22Of course, you shouldn't do either.
00:21:23So finally,
00:21:24the fourth thing to remember about index tracking is that it's about peace of mind.
00:21:30Let me emphasize this three times.
00:21:31Why are we doing index tracking?
00:21:34We do it so we don't have to worry about which stocks to buy,
00:21:39and instead of obsessing over daily movements,
00:21:42we just get the returns of the entire market through diversification.
00:21:48And that's the huge advantage of index tracking.
00:21:51But if you abandon that advantage and keep staring at your phone watching the stock market,
00:21:57constantly stressed,
00:21:58seeing certain stocks rise and thinking 'I should've bought that,
00:22:02' then you're missing the point.
00:22:04The best benefit of index tracking is that you free up mental energy from investing to focus on self-improvement and earning more.
00:22:11So when you do index tracking,
00:22:13just set up automatic investments and spend that time on something productive.
00:22:19So the things to remember when index tracking: 1.
00:22:22Don't go all-in at once—invest regularly,
00:22:24especially if starting when markets are good,
00:22:27not during crashes.
00:22:282.
00:22:29Think long-term—increase bond allocation as you approach retirement.
00:22:333.
00:22:33Be careful with leverage—keep it under 2x,
00:22:36and remember leverage is borrowing too..
00:22:38And I forgot to mention that not all leveraged ETFs incur borrowing costs.
00:22:44Some leveraged ETFs use futures.
00:22:47In that case, there are rollover costs for the futures.
00:22:50Then point 4: maximize the free time that index tracking gives you,
00:22:54and don't stress yourself unnecessarily watching the markets.
00:22:58But is there a way to do index tracking better?
00:23:01The base camp strategy I mentioned in an earlier episode where you put 80-90% in index tracking and 10-20% in your area of expertise—but is there a way to improve index tracking itself?
00:23:13Yes, there are ways.
00:23:14These methods are called Enhanced Indexing strategies,
00:23:17and let me show you some examples.
00:23:19First, there's using futures.
00:23:21Instead of buying stock index ETFs or individual stocks,
00:23:25you can buy stock index futures—since futures margins are much smaller than the notional amount,
00:23:31you only need to deposit that margin and have idle cash left over.
00:23:36You can invest that leftover cash in safe bonds to generate additional returns.
00:23:40But in that case,
00:23:41the futures rollover cost needs to be lower than the bond investment returns.
00:23:45Then the second method would be options.
00:23:48When you judge it's risky,
00:23:50you can buy put options or sell covered calls to earn premiums—there are ETFs related to these strategies too.
00:23:58Then there's improving the index composition itself—if you take the methodology of S&P 500 or Nasdaq indices and create a virtual index with improved criteria,
00:24:11that's one way.
00:24:13But doing that at an individual level is difficult,
00:24:15and the fourth method is to exclude certain companies.
00:24:19When you do S&P 500 index tracking,
00:24:20you're investing in 500 companies,
00:24:22and while picking which ones will do great is hard,
00:24:25you can often identify companies that definitely won't work out.
00:24:28Companies with terrible prospects and high debt ratios—these you can often spot.
00:24:35So you can filter out some companies based on these criteria and track the index otherwise.
00:24:41This way you can outperform the index.
00:24:44Beyond that,
00:24:45there's also the method of excluding certain sectors.
00:24:48There are ETFs that do this too.
00:24:49Finally,
00:24:50index arbitrage—it's hard to call this strictly an Enhanced Indexing strategy—but it's buying and selling stocks before they're added or removed from the index.
00:25:01Because most stock index ETFs' main goal is to track the index as closely as possible.
00:25:08So when Tesla is included,
00:25:10they need to buy Tesla as close to the inclusion date as possible so the ETF's returns match the index returns.
00:25:18But funds or individuals without the requirement to minimize tracking error know that index ETFs will buy on that inclusion date,
00:25:30so they buy beforehand.
00:25:33So you can do index arbitrage that way too.
00:25:36Beyond that,
00:25:36there are various other methods,
00:25:38like using trading algorithms to time entries,
00:25:41and there are actually ETFs pursuing these Enhanced Indexing strategies.
00:25:46Of course they're pursuing them,
00:25:48but there's no guarantee actual returns are better.
00:25:51Some do better, some do worse.
00:25:54So index investing and passive investing in general have exploded massively since 2000.
00:26:00The dark area at the bottom is money leaving active management,
00:26:04and the top shows funds flowing into passive investing—hundreds of trillions in capital shifts from active to passive annually.
00:26:13Because it turns out active fund managers don't outperform the index that much.
00:26:18With expensive fees piled on,
00:26:20they end up underperforming passive funds.
00:26:23As this awareness spreads,
00:26:25passive investing has exploded over the last decade.
00:26:29But what if too much money floods into passive investing?
00:26:32Are there risks??
00:26:33Michael Burry issued a warning about this a few months back.
00:26:38So there's even a Federal Reserve paper on this topic.
00:26:40The risks passive investing poses to financial stability.
00:26:43It was first written in 2018 and updated last year,
00:26:46so I didn't read the whole paper carefully—just skimmed it and looked at the conclusion,
00:26:51then summarized it.
00:26:53So there might be some details I got wrong.
00:26:56Anyway,
00:26:56to summarize: first,
00:26:58regarding liquidity and overreactions to losses,
00:27:02market risk has actually decreased.
00:27:05So more passive investing actually reduces liquidity risk,
00:27:09and regarding how people panic-sell when losses happen and trigger crashes—when money is in active funds managed by a fund manager,
00:27:19people panic when they see losses or downturns and quickly withdraw or sell,
00:27:25but with passive investing,
00:27:27people tolerate losses better and just think 'it's index tracking' and hold.
00:27:33There's a tendency not to panic and just let it be.
00:27:38That's what the paper says.
00:27:39But inverse and leveraged ETFs tend to amplify market volatility.
00:27:45Of course that would happen.
00:27:46Was it 2018?
00:27:48When the XIV ETF blew up,
00:27:50you saw how market volatility can amplify.
00:27:55Then when capital from a few ETF operators concentrates,
00:27:59the administrative risk of those operators expands.
00:28:03For example, Vanguard's computer system crashes.
00:28:06The probability is low and Vanguard probably has all that covered anyway.
00:28:09But you never know what might happen.
00:28:11And regarding correlation changes and volatility between individual stocks,
00:28:15research results are somewhat mixed.
00:28:17That's what it says,
00:28:18but since I only skimmed the conclusion,
00:28:21I might've missed something,
00:28:23and the real issue is that passive investing concentration keeps accelerating.
00:28:29You can see it in that graph from before.
00:28:31So while the 2018 paper found no problem,
00:28:34if passive investing continues to concentrate excessively,
00:28:38what would happen?
00:28:39Thinking about it,
00:28:41basically stocks in the index would become massively overvalued,
00:28:45while stocks outside the index would be undervalued..
00:28:50Especially since many indices are market-cap weighted,
00:28:53even large companies with terrible prospects could be massively overvalued just because they're in the index.
00:28:59When people buy SPY or QQQ index ETFs,
00:29:02they automatically buy those stocks too,
00:29:06so that's a problem.
00:29:08Since everyone owns the same stocks,
00:29:11their volatility could increase.
00:29:13And if this gets severe,
00:29:15you get cheap buying opportunities in non-index stocks.
00:29:19But that assumes this concentration eventually gets corrected.
00:29:23Because actually, this talk has been going on for years.
00:29:27People were saying this back in 2013.
00:29:30But if people keep saying things are overvalued and money keeps flowing in,
00:29:36making them even more overvalued,
00:29:39then index stocks keep outperforming.
00:29:42Returns stay good,
00:29:43while non-index stocks that are already undervalued by valuation keep underperforming for years.
00:29:51So it requires the assumption that this concentration eventually corrects.
00:29:55When that happens depends on market participants' perception.
00:29:58When market participants start recognizing that passive concentration creates big valuation gaps,
00:30:06capital flows accordingly and things rebalance.
00:30:09So that's what we covered about index tracking today.
00:30:12What an index is,
00:30:13what index tracking strategies are,
00:30:14various methods of calculating indices,
00:30:17methods of index tracking,
00:30:18the underlying assumptions of index tracking strategies—that stocks go up long-term—and the four things to remember about index tracking.
00:30:26Invest regularly,
00:30:27think long-term,
00:30:28be careful with leverage,
00:30:30and if you're going to do index tracking,
00:30:32use the free time productively and don't stress watching stock screens.
00:30:37And finally,
00:30:38index tracking isn't average—it's in the top 10-20%.
00:30:41Next, six ways to improve returns on index tracking.
00:30:44And finally,
00:30:45market risks from passive investment concentration.
00:30:47That's what we covered today.
00:30:48So,
00:30:49to the subscriber who asked me to cover index tracking for almost half a year,
00:30:53I apologize for uploading this so late,
00:30:55and I hope it was helpful.
00:30:56Thank you.

Key Takeaway

Index tracking is a superior investment strategy compared to active management, but it requires disciplined execution through regular investing, long time horizons, and minimal leverage while maintaining awareness that upward market trends are not guaranteed and carry systemic concentration risks.

Highlights

Index tracking strategies typically outperform active fund management in the top 10-25% of returns despite being passive, making them highly effective compared to actively managed funds with higher fees

Markets don't unconditionally trend upward - only the US market has consistently risen long-term due to its reserve currency status, declining interest rates, and credit expansion capacity, while indices like Japan's Nikkei, Italy's MIB, and Shanghai Composite have failed to recover even after 20-30 years

Dollar-cost averaging with regular monthly investments significantly outperforms lump-sum investing, especially when entering during market peaks, providing better average purchase prices and reducing timing risk

Leverage should never exceed 2x for index tracking due to daily rebalancing losses, hidden fees (often 5-7% annually), and the risk of irreversible capital loss during market crashes above 30%

Four critical principles for successful index tracking: avoid lump-sum investing at market highs, maintain long-term investment horizons (15+ years), use minimal leverage, and prioritize peace of mind over daily market monitoring

Massive concentration of capital into passive index investing creates systemic risks including overvaluation of index stocks, undervaluation of non-index stocks, potential liquidity issues, and increased volatility if too much money concentrates in a few ETF operators

Timeline

Introduction: The Myth That Stocks Always Recover

The video opens with a sobering reality check about stock market recovery timelines, citing specific examples of major market collapses that took decades to recover or never recovered at all. The Nasdaq took 15 years to recover from the dot-com bubble, while Japan's Nikkei peaked at 39,500 in 1990 but remains at only 27,800 even 30 years later. The host introduces the topic of index tracking strategies and explains that while index investing is commonly recommended, it operates on the assumption that markets always trend upward over the long term. This foundation sets up the central question: is this assumption actually true across all markets and timeframes? The speaker emphasizes that understanding these risks before adopting an index tracking strategy is crucial.

What Is Index Investing and How Does It Work?

This section explains the fundamental mechanics of index investing, starting with what an index is - essentially a bundled collection of financial products like stocks grouped by specific criteria. The S&P 500, for example, contains the 500 largest US corporations selected by S&P using their own methodology. The speaker details different weighting methods: simple equal-weighting (used by Dow Jones where all stocks contribute equally), and market-cap weighted averaging (used by S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Russell 2000 where larger companies have greater influence). Index tracking strategies involve buying the constituent stocks in the exact same proportions as the index to achieve matching returns. The distinction between passive investing (through index funds and ETFs) and active investing (fund managers making discretionary trades) is explained, with the speaker noting that index ETFs typically have lower fees than index funds, making them the preferred choice for individual investors.

The Core Assumption: Do Markets Really Trend Upward Long-Term?

The host challenges the fundamental assumption underlying index tracking strategies - that stock markets always trend upward over long periods. While this has proven true for the US market, the same cannot be said for other developed and developing nations. Japan's Nikkei hit 39,500 in 1990 but has never recovered to that level even 30 years later; Italy's MIB index peaked at 48,500 in 2000 and is now at only 19,000 (less than half); and Shanghai Composite peaked at 5,900 in 2007 and later fell to 3,400. Even the KOSPI and Nasdaq took 11-15 years just to break even after major crashes. The speaker explains why only the US market has sustained long-term growth: the dollar's status as the global reserve currency allows the US to continuously print dollars, decades of declining interest rates have enabled credit expansion, and Fed quantitative easing has injected tremendous liquidity. This economic environment created the illusion that market growth is inevitable, when in reality it's dependent on very specific monetary and fiscal conditions.

Why Only the US Market Has Sustained Upward Trends

The speaker uses an economic thought experiment with a village economy to explain why money supply expansion is necessary for sustained market growth. When money supply increases relative to goods, inflation and rising asset prices occur; conversely, when goods increase without money supply growth, deflation happens. Through credit expansion (when banks lend deposits, effectively increasing circulating money), economies can grow stock values. The US benefits from three unique advantages: as the reserve currency holder, it can print dollars without facing immediate inflation; interest rate decline from high levels to near-zero has enabled massive credit expansion over decades; and the Fed's quantitative easing programs pump dollar liquidity worldwide. South Korea's KOSPI has trended upward due to economic growth, financial market modernization (shift from real estate to stocks), and low interest rates enabling credit expansion. However, without sustained economic growth and the ability to expand credit indefinitely, long-term upward trends become impossible. The speaker warns that with interest rates now near zero and quantitative easing as the only remaining tool, financial markets are entering uncharted territory that may not sustain the multi-decade upward trend investors have experienced.

The Four Critical Rules for Successful Index Tracking

Rather than abandoning index tracking entirely, the speaker outlines four essential principles to practice it safely and effectively. First, avoid investing large lump sums during market peaks - instead use dollar-cost averaging by investing fixed amounts regularly (e.g., 250,000 won monthly). The speaker demonstrates that investing a lump sum at Japan's market peak would take 33 years to break even, whereas investing monthly installments yields an 82% gain over the same period (rising to 108% when accounting for modest interest on idle cash). Second, index tracking requires a long-term commitment of at least 15 years since markets can take 10-15 years to recover from crashes; younger investors can be more aggressive with stocks while those approaching retirement should allocate more to bonds. Third, avoid leverage above 2x because 3x leverage can cause complete capital loss during 30% crashes (as occurred during COVID); additionally, leveraged ETFs have hidden costs including daily rebalancing fees and borrowing costs of 5-7% annually. Fourth, the true benefit of index tracking is peace of mind and freedom from stock obsession - investors should set up automatic investments and use the mental energy saved to improve themselves and increase their earning capacity rather than constantly monitoring markets.

Hidden Costs of Leveraged ETFs and Why They Underperform

The speaker provides a detailed technical breakdown of why leveraged ETFs like FNGU (3x leverage) destroy wealth over time despite theoretical outperformance potential. A 3x leveraged ETF that moves 100 to 90 to 100 (a break-even for the index) results in the leveraged position moving 100 to 70 to 93, permanently losing 7% due to daily rebalancing mechanics - when capital drops, it has a larger percentage gain needed to recover. Beyond rebalancing losses, leveraged ETFs charge management fees (typically 0.95%) plus daily financing rates (borrowing costs). In 2019 with Fed rates at 2%, the financing cost would be 3% (Fed rate plus 1%), and since 2x capital is borrowed for 3x leverage, the actual cost becomes 6% plus the 0.95% fee, totaling approximately 7% annual bleed. With rising interest rates, these costs could exceed 9%. The speaker emphasizes that if forced to choose between leveraged ETFs and borrowing at low rates to invest in regular 1x ETFs, the latter would be superior (though both should be avoided). The fundamental problem with leveraged ETFs is that markets move sideways most of the time, activating the rebalancing penalty rather than the theoretical compounding advantage.

Enhanced Indexing Strategies to Improve Returns

The speaker explores advanced techniques to potentially outperform basic index tracking without relying on dangerous leverage. Using stock index futures instead of ETFs allows investors to deploy smaller margin requirements while investing idle cash in bonds to generate additional returns - but only if futures rollover costs don't exceed bond returns. Options strategies like buying put options for downside protection or selling covered calls for premium income can improve returns during risky periods. Improving index composition through modified screening criteria (better than the original index's methodology) is theoretically possible but difficult for individual investors. Excluding companies with poor prospects and high debt ratios while tracking the rest of the index is achievable and often yields outperformance. Sector exclusion strategies exist through specialized ETFs. Finally, index arbitrage involves buying stocks before their inclusion in major indices, knowing that index ETFs must buy on inclusion dates. However, the speaker cautions that while these enhanced indexing strategies exist and some ETFs pursue them, there's no guarantee they will produce better actual returns - some outperform while others underperform the basic index.

Systemic Risks of Massive Passive Investment Concentration

As hundreds of trillions of dollars have shifted from active to passive investing over the past two decades, systemic risks have emerged that the Federal Reserve itself has studied. While passive investing does reduce panic selling and improves average holding periods compared to active funds, the concentration of capital into a few large index ETF operators creates administrative risks. More critically, as passive capital concentrates into market-cap weighted indices, this creates massive valuation distortions: stocks within major indices (like S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100) become overvalued simply because they're included, while stocks outside these indices remain undervalued regardless of fundamental merit. The speaker notes this concentration effect has been discussed since 2013, yet money continues to flow into passive indices, perpetuating the overvaluation. The speaker questions whether this will eventually self-correct when market participants recognize the valuation gap, or whether the concentration could continue indefinitely if returns remain superior. Inverse and leveraged ETFs amplify volatility during market stress (evidenced by the 2018 XIV collapse), and individual stock correlation increases as everyone owns identical index holdings. These systemic risks suggest that while index tracking is an excellent personal investment strategy, excessive concentration of capital at the market level could create financial instability.

Conclusion and Key Takeaways on Index Tracking

The video concludes by summarizing that index tracking strategies, when properly executed, rank in the top 10-25% of investment approaches, significantly outperforming most active fund managers. The speaker reiterates the four critical principles: invest regularly through dollar-cost averaging rather than lump sums, maintain a long-term perspective of 15+ years, avoid leverage or keep it minimal at 2x maximum, and prioritize peace of mind by not obsessing over daily market movements. The speaker acknowledges that while stocks don't unconditionally trend upward as an absolute truth, they have trended upward historically in the US due to specific monetary and fiscal conditions that may not persist indefinitely. Index tracking remains statistically superior to active management, but investors must understand the underlying assumptions, the specific conditions that enabled past market growth, and the potential systemic risks from excessive capital concentration in passive strategies. The video addresses a subscriber's persistent request over 8 months to cover this comprehensive guide, with the speaker apologizing for the delayed upload while hoping the detailed analysis provides practical value.

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