Active investing means that someone (hopefully someone who knows what they're doing) is in charge of managing the money and investments in a fund. When you buy shares in a mutual fund, for example, you're paying a fee because someone has hired theoretically smart analysts and portfolio managers who spend all day looking at stocks and bonds to make investments on your behalf.
The idea is that these managers and analysts are...active. They are using their own experience, forecasts, and research to decide which investments are best. The opposite of active investing is passive investing (duh), which is just...buying an index fund. Index funds don't have portfolio managers. What they do have are rebalancers. Might sound like Marvel villains, but they're really just finance folks who check every so often (usually quarterly) to make sure that the index still reflects what you think you bought in the first place.
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Finance: What are Active Investing and A...4 Views
Finance a la shmoop.. what are active investing and active management? Active
doing something, active as in trying to beat the market by trading stocks active [People riding a bike on stock market appears on board]
as in humans making decisions often with the help of computers trying to beat
their index or the overall market ie the S&P 500 that's what we mean by the
market active; investing.. active; management okay
passive just passive.. active is what hedge funds and mutual funds and any
kind of funds that have a strategy do they actively try to invest money such
that the performance of their portfolio does better than whatever index or
benchmark it's measured against and notice were not talking about after-tax [Man discussing active investments]
performance here because remember every time you trade in a taxable account
while the attacks men cometh but we won't go there right now..... Your benchmark
compare is versus the S&P 500 and you manage a broadly based mutual fund the
passive investing cousin in this investment is an index fund think ticker
SPY, that's the biggest S&P 500 index fund well index funds are not actively
managed they are passively managed they just sit there and get tweaked a little [Pile of money grows larger overnight]
bit each year or really each quarter to kind of mirror the S&P 500 or whatever
their index is supposed to mirror but they just kind of sit there there's no
human trying to beat the market they are the market index funds are the
market and yeah 99% of actively managed funds don't beat the market over any
extended period of year like five or ten years very few ever beat the market and
essentially none of them beat the market after taxes so then why would someone
invest in an actively managed mutual fund when they're paying taxes and
they're thinking about an index fund as a comparable well basically they're one [Mutual funds on a table and a lollipop appears]
of these so yeah don't be one of these guys
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