Can I Be a Boglehead and Still Own Stocks?

Wes McBrideAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

I have enormous respect for the late John Bogle, the father of passive investing. Financial literature shows that the vast majority of actively managed funds underperform indexes, such as the S&P 500. Furthermore, performance is often determined by asset allocation and buoyed by avoiding excessive expense ratios — a benefit low-cost ETFs deliver.

Mr. Bogle was wary of ETFs, viewing their ease of trading as inducement for irresponsible financial decisions. In fact, he compared an ETF to handing an arsonist a match. However, his viewpoint softened over time, and he eventually acknowledged that a passively managed ETF was a useful tool as long as the investor held it for the long term.

The firm he founded, The Vanguard Group, is now one of the largest issuers of ETFs in the world. Vanguard also published research (“Advisor’s Alpha”) that found an advisor can help investors’ portfolios profit by an extra 3% per year. Advisors accomplish this through appropriate allocation, tax efficiencies, and helping investors avoid emotional decisions. Advisors pursuing a disciplined buy-and-hold strategy can responsibly implement ETFs in client portfolios.

The data supports ETFs being a cornerstone of any securities-based investment strategy, if not the only strategy. I would argue, however, that the market performance you get also includes some cringeworthy times. Is there data on a strategy that matches the performance of the market while also having some downside protection? Well, I wouldn’t be writing this article if there wasn’t.

Oracle of Omaha Is Not Omniscient

First, let’s consider how poorly Warren Buffett has done in boom times.

As we all know, Mr. Buffett is a savvy investor who has consistently outperformed the market over the course of many decades and to the tune of many billions of dollars. I am not suggesting that any of us can match such consistent results. However, Mr. Buffett did not beat the market when investors were, on the whole, “irrationally exuberant.” In those years, he could have had superior returns by following an index. When those bubbles eventually burst, he came out on top. As he said, “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”