When it comes to comparing active vs. passive investing and determining which investment method is best, the answer isn’t as clear cut as you might imagine. Everyone has very different risk tolerance levels, so it’s essential to understand your preferences and investing goals before you choose between active and passive investing choices.
Active vs. Passive Investing Definitions
Actively managed investments, such as mutual funds, try to beat the market performance of a benchmark index, such as the S&P 500, by choosing the best 100 or so performing stocks based on a likelihood of receiving good returns.
A passively managed investment will simply accept that market performance is what it is and invest in all 500 stocks on the index.
Which is Better – Active or Passive?
Many investors wonder what the better option is for their own investing goals. Once again, it does come down to the individual investor’s levels of risk tolerance.
The level of risk you’re willing to take with your hard-earned money can often determine how you’re willing to spend and invest. After all, higher risks can often yield higher returns. Unfortunately, higher risks can also compound losses too.
The low risk might equate to lower returns, but it’s commonly believed that a low guaranteed gain is far better than a risky bet on a higher risk-return that may not eventuate.
Active Investing
An active investor understands that not all stock pricings move at the same rate or even in the same direction as the entire market as a whole. They will actively try to single out individual stocks that have the likelihood of outperforming the index.
In most cases, actively managed mutual funds carry higher costs. This is partly associated with the higher trading costs, time costs involved with researching likely stock picks, and management costs.
For those investors who wish to take on their active investing activities themselves rather than trust their money to a fund manager, then day trading on the stock market is a very similar tactic. You spend the time researching stocks that are likely to outperform the index, and you manage your portfolio personally, buying and selling as you try to capture profits and minimize losses.
Passive Investing
A passive investor will understand that as the market index moves up or down. Then having a passively managed fund that is broadly diversified across almost all the available stocks on that index is likely to return average returns that are somewhat in line with the returns shown by that index.
Passively managed funds often carry lower fees and may tend to offer lower returns. However, those lower returns are often favored by investors who believe that receiving a low return is better than risking the chance of receiving no return at all.
For investors who once again don’t wish to trust their money to a fund manager, then your passive investing option is to develop a broadly diversified stock portfolio that you hold for the long term. You have the choice of allowing your stocks to sit in your portfolio and collecting the dividend directly, or you can reinvest your dividend earnings back into your portfolio to acquire further stocks.
What are your thoughts? I welcome all comments both in the comment section below and at my email address. If you need help or assistance, reach out to me or any fee-only Registered Financial Consultant. For those interested in my email newsletter and a short eBook on Financial Planning, fill out the form below.