Tilt Fund

  

Categories: Mutual Funds

Your neighbor has a Mustang. You’re tired of getting blown away during Saturday night drag races on your street. You really want to beat that Mustang.

You start by buying the same Mustang your neighbor has. But then you make additions in order to beat it. You replace the engine with something you bought off a used jet. You add a nitrous booster. And, of course, you paint flames along the doors, if only for intimidation value.

The same premise applies to a tilt fund. It's an investment strategy that starts by mimicking an existing index.

You want to create a tilt fund off the Dow Jones Industrial Average. You'll start by buying all 30 Dow components in the same weightings as they exist in the actual index. You've basically replicated the Dow index...the equivalent of buying the same car as your neighbor.

Now it's time to start tilting. You monkey with the components to get an edge over the actual Dow. You begin adding other stocks. Maybe a tech high-flier you like. Maybe something from a sector you think is underrepresented in the actual index.
In the end, you have something that's mostly a match for the Dow. But (hopefully), if you're good at picking the extras, you have a fund that will outperform the index on which it is based. You'll be able to blow that old Mustang off the line and win the respect of your neighbors.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is the Dow Jones Industria...2710 Views

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finance a la shmoop- what is the Dow Jones Industrial Average? well it's just

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an index. it's a basket of 30 industrial stocks hence the catchy industrial word [list of the 30 stocks involved in the Dow]

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in there and it was started in 1896 by Charles Dow and Edward Jones sort of the

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Coke and Pepsi of stock averages in the day .worth noting is the fact that while

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the Dow average is quoted often in the press it's not something that real Wall

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Street traders really rely on that much as a market place holder anymore. why?

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well because the Dow comprises only 30 stocks. it isn't really a broad market [Dow Jones in the trash]

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representation, and you know the way the S&P 500 is the 500 is bigger than 30. Big

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Brother has way more stocks and is thus way more liquid than the relatively

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blippi set of 30 stocks that the Dow offers. over time the Dow has changed as

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companies were bought and/or died and or just withered and became no longer

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relevant. i.e. newspaper industry. which means that this thing has gone through

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more faces than Kanye West .yeah. [Kanye West faces pictured]

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Finance: What is the S&P 500?
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What is the S&P 500? It's Standard & Poor's 500 generally largest companies, with a U.S. domestic bias. The S&P 500 is usually what investors think...

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