What are the arguments against index investing?

The only interesting argument against index investing that I have heard is that index investing hinders the market darwinism. Instead of companies being rewarded with higher stock prices (lower cost of capital) for good performance, they are rewarded for being big (in the case of the SPX) or just being anointed (in the case of the DOW). This can have a destabailizing effect as stocks get more correlated and valuations converge where they shouldn't.

Would have thought that survivorship bias is a positive reason to invest in indexes...the weak and crappy companies (the stock market makes its judgement and sends the share price down) are weeded out every quarter to make room for the strong and successful.
 
Past twenty five years in Japan has been a losing proposition. In fact, there are a number of similar sized periods in US stock market history in the last century where the index has gone nowhere. Imagine some guy at age 40 deciding to stick all his money into an index fund (because stocks always go up over time right??!!) for his retirement and then finding out at age 65 the value of the fund is at the same level as when he bought it. Some retirement!

Mad gamble imho.

Sure. that's a risk. There is no free lunch.

Overtime stocks perform well because typically companies (as a whole) earn more than their fixed income and their equity costs of capital. While valuations are volatile (over the course of a lifespan) aggregate earnings continue to grow as the economy grows and the world becomes more efficient.
 
Would have thought that survivorship bias is a positive reason to invest in indexes...the weak and crappy companies (the stock market makes its judgement and sends the share price down) are weeded out every quarter to make room for the strong and successful.

It's a social argument mostly put forward by guys like Warren Buffet who make their living picking stocks (allocating capital to whom they think should win).
 
If you are going to hold for a good number of years don't forget inflation. See if you can find a long term chart of the DOW adjusted by the government lying inflation figures. Divide the last number for the Dow on the inflation adjusted chart by two for a more realistic result.
 
There is a wonderful series by Ploutos on Seeking Alpha called Five Simple Ways to Beat the Market. His suggests are indeed extremely simple. One could also look at a very simple momentum system, such as that proposed by Faber in The Ivy Portfolio (he does not claim to beat the market, only to obtain the same returns as the market with less volatility, which is really the same thing as beating the market).

Although there is a lot of underperformance around, one needs to remember that pension funds and mutual funds have charters. They cannot invest however they want to, and changing anything to adapt to market conditions is like turning a battleship. However, the individual investor has a different set of opportunities and can be more nimble, and may be able to beat the market using simple methods.
 
There is a wonderful series by Ploutos on Seeking Alpha called Five Simple Ways to Beat the Market. His suggests are indeed extremely simple. One could also look at a very simple momentum system, such as that proposed by Faber in The Ivy Portfolio (he does not claim to beat the market, only to obtain the same returns as the market with less volatility, which is really the same thing as beating the market).

Although there is a lot of underperformance around, one needs to remember that pension funds and mutual funds have charters. They cannot invest however they want to, and changing anything to adapt to market conditions is like turning a battleship. However, the individual investor has a different set of opportunities and can be more nimble, and may be able to beat the market using simple methods.
ha, ha ,ha...Only a few lucky "Beat the Market", most lose by not being in the market.
 
ha, ha ,ha...Only a few lucky "Beat the Market", most lose by not being in the market.
Some win, some lose in the market. While others who not in market win or lose.
It is just how many lost or win . :)
It is a number game.
 
The amount of capital available needs to be in a "sweet" spot for the retail investor to outperform an index. Most are under-capitalized and look for lottery ticket stocks.

Earlier in the thread it was mentioned that the odds of selecting a stock to beat the S&P was 1:500. This is wrong. It is 50:50. As a general proposition, half the stocks in the S&P outperform, half under-perform (I realize this is not 100% accurate due to weightings and extremes of performance values, but for this post it is close enough to explain the concept).

What 3 to 5 sectors will outperform the index?
What 5 stocks in each sector will outperform their peers?
Now you have a basket of 15 to 25 stocks that have good odds of exceeding the index while having the gremlin of risk duct taped into its chair.

The problem is many individuals do not have the capital. To buy a small holding of 10,000 $USD per stock requires 250M. Throwing a thousand bucks into an index without thinking is so much easier. Oh yes, the self-defined basket of 25 requires significant time to manage, the capacity to think, the capacity to not self-deceive, and a lot of people are just lazy.

Mr. Buffett has commented on the other extreme, of having too much capital, so that there are not enough opportunities, but if you are in that situation, you are not reading this.
 
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