Robin Hanson talks (briefly) about why index funds have not taken over the world:
Even employees who invest for themselves tend to pick at least one high fee intermediary: an active-management investment firm. Few take the low cost option of just directly investing in a low-overhead index fund, as recommended by academics for a half-century.Whatever the reason, this is why the recent spate of Roboadvisors have come to the fore (that, and their very slick websites).
Looking at my own portfolio, I see lots of index funds, and the effort to patch together international index funds back when that was hard to create, plus strange situation specific hedges (REIT, Muni Bonds) and a handful of experiments (BP, Greece, Fannie Mae bonds).
Certainly time to rationalize it all, but tricky to do without triggering a lot of capital gains.
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