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by avar
3092 days ago
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Yes, that makes sense. But that's entirely unrelated to what I'm pointing out here. (Some of) the article is making the argument that investors should decide for themselves how over- or undervalued certain segments of the economy are. So on one hand you'd have a diverse market cap weighted index where you buy into stocks representing the proportional to their portion of the economy. On the other hand you might think you have special knowledge to layer on top of that. Are banks undervalued? By how much? Let's say 10%. Then let's sell something else to buy 10% more banks, now what's 10% overvalued? Tech? I've yet to see any sort of compelling data that this sort of managed investing is a good idea, and that's what it is. Just because you're not buying TSLA and instead just disproportionately buying "car stuff", or not selling AAPL but just selling "tech stuff" you're still trying to pick stocks and trying to beat other stockpickers doing the same thing. You're just picking subsets of the economy instead of individual stocks. |
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Also...the total market, cap weighted, may be the optimal way to invest the whole world's capital - but that doesn't mean that it's the optimal way to invest, say, $50K. If you have $100B, say, you can't put it in a stock that's currently valued at $1B. But if you have $1000, you don't have that constraint.
Regardless of how the optimal portfolio may differ, when you're investing a relatively minute amount compared to the entire market, it's hard to imagine the optimum is not going to be different.
...You don't pilot your car under all the same constraints as an 18-wheeler, just because that's optimum for shipping large quantities.