Active Investing

  

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.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is the Barrons Confidence ...14 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop...what is the baron's confidence index

00:06

well Barron's is an old-tiny publisher of Wall Street data and today it's a

00:13

stodgy magazine catering to sophisticated financial readers well the [Magazine of barron's confidence index]

00:17

magazine has fiercely opinionated readers and it began to take advantage

00:21

of them first with simple old-school polls managed by its journalists before

00:27

computers were really a thing and then it began to codify an index the densely

00:32

packed brain power that it was surveying as to where the markets and the world

00:37

was heading so one outcome of this outbound research effort was the bond [Bond index equalling Barron's confidence index]

00:42

index or Baron's confidence index which is calculated by dividing the average

00:47

yield to maturity on what is generally double-a and triple-a grade bonds by the

00:53

average yield to maturity on what is generally double B ish grade bonds got

00:58

it? So triple A double A over the triple B'ers.. Well why would

01:03

you do this strange calculation in the first place

01:05

well it reflects its audience's attitude about credit risk the presumption among

01:11

pretty much everyone is that the safe bet ie US government paper is just a [100 dollar bill stamped safe]

01:16

reflection of inflation more or less and everything else or at least all other

01:20

credit is pegged to that very safe US paper so it sets the standard against

01:26

which the riskier credit is measured it's stable since the Barron's index is

01:31

a bond risk index it is in essence a calculation of its audience's confidence

01:36

in the US economy relative to everything else generally speaking in a good or

01:40

growing economy there are very few bankruptcies or defaults why well partly

01:44

just because times are good and people are buying you know stuff [People walking in a shopping mall]

01:48

yeah even stuff like that and if a given company individually stumbles well there

01:52

are often competitors who are doing well and who would likely acquire that

01:57

company maybe not for a huge premium but at least they'd pay off the company's

02:00

debt so it would be money good right for those triple B's so it's bonds even if

02:04

lowly rated would go back to par and everyone would get paid off as planned [company and competitor smiling]

02:08

so the index isn't an absolute measure of anything really it has to be viewed

02:13

relative to wherever it was trading last week

02:15

last month last year when investors are confident the spreads for bond yields

02:20

are narrower and the ratio is higher.. well think about the intermediate

02:24

bond yields but when the ratio is high and increasing it means that faith and [Bond yield graph appears]

02:29

the economy is growing right because that denominator yield shrinks because

02:34

grade triple B's instead of having to yield 12 percent yield like ten or eight

02:38

and inversely the ratio is lower and decreasing demonstrating less faith in

02:43

the economy when things go the other way and when the economy is really in the

02:47

toilet well expect to hear a lot of this sound [Tumbleweed flies past a man in a clothing store]

Up Next

Finance: What are Active Investing and Active Management?
4 Views

What are Active Investing and Active Management? Active investing means exactly what it sounds like. The investor is actively buying and selling, a...

Finance: What is Closet Indexing?
0 Views

What is Closet Indexing? In the mutual fund arena, funds are usually active, meaning there is a highly paid fund manager calling the shots, or pass...

Finance: What is a Country Basket (Index Fund)?
30 Views

What is a Country Basket (Index Fund)? Investing internationally can be a challenge, as foreign exchange, different accounting rules, time zones an...

Finance: What is the Russell Index?
4 Views

The Russell Index is a series of indices that tracks the progress of stocks in a given basket. Aw. We were hoping it tracked adorable Jack Russell...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)