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LOW-COST
index funds:
A Beginner’s Guide
Low-cost index funds can be a great way for both beginning and advanced investors to invest in the stock market. Index funds can:
With all these advantages, it’s little wonder that legendary investor Warren Buffett recommends index funds (notably a Standard & Poor’s
500 index fund) to
most investors.
Here’s what to look for in a low-cost index fund and a list of some of the cheapest index funds on the market.
Reduce your risks compared to investing in individual stocks
Minimize the time and money you spend investing
Offer attractive returns, in part by reducing the fees you pay.
What is an
index fund?
An index fund is an investment fund that tracks a specific collection of assets called an index. The index can include:
BONDS
OTHER
ASSETS
stocks
Including commodities such as gold.
The most well-known index is the Standard & Poor’s 500 index (.SPX), which includes about 500 of the largest publicly traded American companies. Other popular indexes include the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) and the Russell 2000 (.RUT).
An index fund is a passive investment that tracks the assets included in the index. The index fund does not actively invest in the market. Instead, it merely tries to match the performance of the index by holding the same assets in the same proportions as the index.
How to invest in
low-cost index funds
The two most important things to know about investing in low-cost index funds are the index’s long-term returns and the cost to own the index fund. That is, you’ll want to earn the potentially largest return while paying as little as possible to the fund company to achieve that return.
INDEX
FUNDS
Investors looking for a top index fund should first check out what returns it could produce.
Long-term returns
An index’s long-term performance is a good gauge to how it might perform in the future, but of course there are no guarantees in investing.
Any fund will list its performance over a one to 10 year period as well as from the fund’s inception. It will show you the annualized return over these periods, so you can get a sense of what you could earn in an average year.
Stock funds are likely to perform better long term than bond funds, but bonds may outperform stocks over shorter time periods, only because bonds tend to be more stable than stocks.
The S&P 500, for example, has returned about 10 percent annually over long periods of time, though it’s done better than
that over the last
decade or so,
averaging 11.6
percent from 2011
to 2020. The Nasdaq
Composite has
shown an even
better return over
the past decade,
putting up annual
returns of 17.1 percent
from 2011 to 2020.
NASDAQ
17.1%
S&P 500
11.6%
2011
2020
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite are widely followed indexes, but many fund companies create their own proprietary indexes that are not as widely known. So you’ll want to check the long-term returns of the index — or at least the index fund — over time to see how it
could perform.
And when investing in funds don’t forget the importance of mean reversion. This technical investing term effectively means that a fund’s performance moves toward its long-term average. So funds that have been outperforming their long-term average for the last year or two are more likely to revert to their long-term average than to sustain their above-trend performance.
Paying attention to mean reversion is one way that investors can practice “buy low, sell high.“
Cost
Imagine you had a choice of a Big Mac at two McDonald’s restaurants. Both serve the same hamburger but one charges a higher price.
You could literally buy the same thing but pay more for it at one location compared to the other.
And it’s the same issue with index funds that are based on the same index. The key point for investors in index funds is to avoid unnecessary costs, and a few checks can help you do this.
To check the cost of a fund, you can look it up with a quick search and determine its expense ratio. The expense ratio tells you what percent of your investment you’ll pay as a fee to the fund company.
EXPENSE RATIO
For example, a typical index fund might charge an expense ratio of 0.12 percent. That means you’d pay a fee of $12 annually for every $10,000 you had invested in the fund.
Another cost to watch
out for is called a
sales load. The sales
load is basically a
commission to the
salesperson, and it’s
money that comes right out of your pocket.
The good news is that it’s easy to avoid this cost,
since many fund management companies offer no-load funds. And it’s a fee that applies only to mutual funds, so if you’re buying an ETF, you can rest easy here.
SALES LOAD
To find no-load mutual funds, you can search for it at broker sites such as Fidelity and Charles Schwab.
The S&P 500 is one of the most followed indexes in the world, and it has a number of index funds that track it. Like that McDonald’s hamburger, the returns of these funds are going to be about the same over time, so the key differentiator is each fund’s expense ratio.
9 lowest-cost
S&P 500 index funds
Here are 9 of the lowest-cost funds that track the S&P 500:
Fidelity 500 Index Fund (FXAIX)
Expense ratio:
FUND:
0.015%
Fidelity ZERO Large Cap Index (FNILX)
0.0%
iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV)
0.03%
Schwab S&P 500 Index Fund (SWPPX)
0.02%
SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY)
0.09%
State Street S&P 500 Index Fund Class N (SVSPX)
0.16%
T. Rowe Price Equity Index 500 Fund (PREIX)
0.18%
Vanguard 500 Index Admiral Shares (VFIAX)
0.04%
Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO)
0.03%
It’s also worth noting that many other funds are “closet trackers,” meaning they don’t technically track an index but do so in practice due to what they own. Many such funds also charge much more than the low-cost funds mentioned above and may not deliver the same high performance.
The S&P 500 is one of the most followed indexes in the world, and it has a number of index funds that track it. Like that McDonald’s hamburger, the returns of these funds are going to be about the same over time, so the key differentiator is each fund’s expense ratio.
You can buy low-cost index funds as either an ETF or a mutual fund, and well-known indexes such as the S&P 500 will have both available. The list above, for example, contains both kinds. (The three-letter ticker symbols are for ETFs, while the five-letter symbols are for mutual funds.)
In many cases, what determines the kind of fund you can buy is the platform you’re using. That is, some platforms such as 401(k) retirement plans will allow you to purchase only mutual funds. Similarly, while ETFs are generally available at all brokers that allow stock trading, you may not be able to buy all mutual funds, depending on the broker’s relationship with the fund company.
In general, stock index mutual funds have a lower expense ratio than stock index ETFs, as you can see in the chart below. But mutual funds as a whole are more expensive, because they tend to be actively managed, rather than passively managed, as most ETFs are. In addition, mutual funds may have a sales load, and that’s not the case with index ETFs.
Low-cost index funds vs. ETFs vs. mutual funds
But given the ability to choose any S&P 500 fund, there’s little reason to prefer an ETF over a mutual fund or vice versa. Ultimately what you’re looking for is the lowest-cost fund that delivers the same overall investing performance.
Bottom line
As you can see, the key difference between index funds that track the same index is basically just the cost.
That’s why experts tell investors to focus on the cost of funds when looking at funds based on well-known indexes such as the S&P 500. A fee that doesn’t go into the fund manager’s pocket is money that can compound for you for years.
This infographic was designed by Avalaunch Media
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
0.35%
0.30%
0.25%
0.20%
0.15%
0.10%
0.05%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2005:
0.28%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2006:
0.29%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2007:
0.31%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2008:
0.30%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2009:
0.34%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2010:
0.33%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2011:
0.3%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2012:
0.29%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2013:
0.27%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2014:
0.25%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2015:
0.25%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2016:
0.22%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2017:
0.21%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2018:
0.19%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2019:
0.18%
Stock ETF Asset-weighted
2020:
0.18%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2005:
0.21%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2006:
0.19%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2007:
0.17%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2008:
0.18%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2009:
0.17%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2010:
0.15%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2011:
0.14%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2012:
0.13%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2013:
0.12%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2014:
0.11%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2015:
0.1%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2016:
0.09%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2017:
0.08%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2018:
0.08%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2019:
0.07%
Stock index
mutual fund asset-weighted
2020:
0.06%
Expense ratios on stock index mutual funds have plummeted, too
Expense ratios on stock index mutual funds — that is, passively managed funds — have also dropped, and beat out passively managed stock ETFs. Select a year on the graph line for more info:
Stock ETF asset-weighted
Stock index mutual fund asset-weighted
Source: Investment Company Institute Fact Book 2021