Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone find this kind of amusing? The bogleheads and FIRE crowds are so smug about their investing in index funds. I personally think diversity is so important. Index funds are fine but there is always a risk.
This specific issue has been discussed on the Bogleheads forum. It has nothing to do with index funds and everything to do with an investor being educated enough to know what they buying and about asset location. TDF do not belong in taxable accounts for a variety of reasons, this being one of them. Even ETFs have capital gains distributions.
Your response very much conflicts with the message I’ve seen shared over and over again by those who promote index funds. The message has been something along the lines of “index funds allows you to be a passive investor. You don’t need to research the funds. Do the three index fund approach. Put your money in the funds and sit back.”
It seems odd to me that now the promoters are saying you need to educate yourself about index funds and this happened because the investors are uneducated.
The three funds approach obviates the need for a target fund. It is the nature of a target fund that caught people up--they are not really an index fund--together with having it in a taxable account.
Personally would never do a target fund.
No it was not because it was a target fund.
It’s because institutional investors left the fund in mass, and their redemptions triggered lots of churn within the fund.
I don’t understand how i have to pay tax on gains I don’t see, but then when I sell the fund later after it’s risen, so I pay taxes again?
I don't disagree that the institutional move compounded the hit. But in a target fund, the managers have to rebalance in ways that make sense for the fund goals and not for your individual tax situation. You have far more control when the rebalancing is in your hands and you can think through your specific tax situation in deciding how and when to do it. This is what you get with the three funds approach.
My broader point is that this move by Vanguard does not invalidate the benefits of the three fund approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone find this kind of amusing? The bogleheads and FIRE crowds are so smug about their investing in index funds. I personally think diversity is so important. Index funds are fine but there is always a risk.
This specific issue has been discussed on the Bogleheads forum. It has nothing to do with index funds and everything to do with an investor being educated enough to know what they buying and about asset location. TDF do not belong in taxable accounts for a variety of reasons, this being one of them. Even ETFs have capital gains distributions.
Your response very much conflicts with the message I’ve seen shared over and over again by those who promote index funds. The message has been something along the lines of “index funds allows you to be a passive investor. You don’t need to research the funds. Do the three index fund approach. Put your money in the funds and sit back.”
It seems odd to me that now the promoters are saying you need to educate yourself about index funds and this happened because the investors are uneducated.
The three funds approach obviates the need for a target fund. It is the nature of a target fund that caught people up--they are not really an index fund--together with having it in a taxable account.
Personally would never do a target fund.
No it was not because it was a target fund.
It’s because institutional investors left the fund in mass, and their redemptions triggered lots of churn within the fund.
I don’t understand how i have to pay tax on gains I don’t see, but then when I sell the fund later after it’s risen, so I pay taxes again?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone find this kind of amusing? The bogleheads and FIRE crowds are so smug about their investing in index funds. I personally think diversity is so important. Index funds are fine but there is always a risk.
This specific issue has been discussed on the Bogleheads forum. It has nothing to do with index funds and everything to do with an investor being educated enough to know what they buying and about asset location. TDF do not belong in taxable accounts for a variety of reasons, this being one of them. Even ETFs have capital gains distributions.
Your response very much conflicts with the message I’ve seen shared over and over again by those who promote index funds. The message has been something along the lines of “index funds allows you to be a passive investor. You don’t need to research the funds. Do the three index fund approach. Put your money in the funds and sit back.”
It seems odd to me that now the promoters are saying you need to educate yourself about index funds and this happened because the investors are uneducated.
The three funds approach obviates the need for a target fund. It is the nature of a target fund that caught people up--they are not really an index fund--together with having it in a taxable account.
Personally would never do a target fund.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone find this kind of amusing? The bogleheads and FIRE crowds are so smug about their investing in index funds. I personally think diversity is so important. Index funds are fine but there is always a risk.
This specific issue has been discussed on the Bogleheads forum. It has nothing to do with index funds and everything to do with an investor being educated enough to know what they buying and about asset location. TDF do not belong in taxable accounts for a variety of reasons, this being one of them. Even ETFs have capital gains distributions.
Your response very much conflicts with the message I’ve seen shared over and over again by those who promote index funds. The message has been something along the lines of “index funds allows you to be a passive investor. You don’t need to research the funds. Do the three index fund approach. Put your money in the funds and sit back.”
It seems odd to me that now the promoters are saying you need to educate yourself about index funds and this happened because the investors are uneducated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CxAEi42U3gU
15 min video but he gives an good overview of what happened and some potential risk for other Vanguard funds.
Very useful video, thanks for posting.
This was a great video. Rob was a securities lawyer in DC, anybody know him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CxAEi42U3gU
15 min video but he gives an good overview of what happened and some potential risk for other Vanguard funds.
Very useful video, thanks for posting.