75,000 mark for the first time on Wednesday, April 10. The NSE Nifty50 index has touched the 22,700 mark. The benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty have soared around 18.74 per cent and 20.03 per cent respectively during the Calendar Year 2023.
In fiscal 2024, the Nifty posted a 30 per cent return. With such exemplary returns posted by the benchmark indices, is it rational to simply toe their line instead of investing in active schemes in a bid to ‘beat the benchmark’? Several theories and books are written on the ‘efficient market hypothesis’, which implies that markets are efficient, leaving barely any room to make excess profits by investing. The bestselling book ‘A Random Walk Down Wall Street’, written by Princeton University economist Burton Gordon Malkiel, also propagates this theory, which says that consistently beating the market is quite hard for anyone.
Legendary investor Warren Buffett remarked in February 2019 that he had a tough time trying to beat the S&P 500. In the same interview, he further mentioned that his two investing gurus, Ted Weschler and Todd Combs, have both underperformed the benchmark index during the past few years by a “tiny bit." So, it is not an exaggeration to say that nobody — simply nobody — can beat the market forever, not even Warren Buffett. We spoke to a few experts to get their views on the impact of investing only in index funds.
They argue that index funds enable investors to weather volatility in the market and one can avoid risking too much by investing in active mutual funds. “The decision to stay invested in index funds hinges on the broader asset allocation strategy. Given that index funds lack the ability to hold cash or adopt defensive stances, investors remain vulnerable
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