The Worry About Indexing is Overblown

Summary: Investors are clearly shifting away from actively managed funds to those based on index strategies. Only time will tell, but this has the look of a durable, secular change in investment management. But much of the perceived threat to market stability of indexing is overblown. Overall, the stock market is still dominated by active management. And while the number of index products has clearly exploded, 96% of these are of insignificant size.

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Bloomberg recently reported that the number of indexes has exploded and now exceeds the number of stocks in the US. Enlarge any chart by clicking on it.



This shift to index-based investing has been blamed for artificially compressing market volatility and for sowing the seeds of future stock market calamity. On balance, these claims seem hugely overblown.

It's clearly true that there is a shift to index-based investing. Over the past 10 years, approximately $1.4 trillion has flowed into domestic equity index mutual funds and ETFs. About $1 trillion of this money has come out of actively managed mutual funds (from ICI; full report can be found here).



This has the look of a secular shift away from actively managed funds and into index funds: note in the chart above how fund flows did not reverse during the 2008 bear market. In other words, despite a devastating collapse in equity prices, investors added money to index funds and continued to pull money out of actively managed funds. The perceived value of active professional management, even during a tumultuous environment, was poor.