and copy the strategy, making it less effective in the process. So even if you
believe that there will be an occasional $100 bill lying on the ground, you should
also recognize that it won’t be lying there for long.
Second, the most effective critics of the efficient markets theory think the
average investor probably can’t beat the market and shouldn’t try. Andrew Lo of
MIT and A. Craig MacKinlay of the Wharton School are the authors of a book
entitled
A Non-Random Walk Down Wall Street in which they assert that
financial experts with extraordinary resources, such as supercomputers, can beat
the market by finding and exploiting pricing anomalies. A
BusinessWeek review
of the book noted, “Surprisingly, perhaps, Lo and MacKinlay actually agree with
Malkiel’s advice to the average investor. If you don’t have any special expertise
or the time and money to find expert help, they say, go ahead and purchase index
funds.”
8
Warren Buffett, arguably the best stock picker of all time, says the same
thing.
9
Even Richard Thaler, the guy beating the market with his behavioral
growth fund, told the
Wall Street Journal that he puts most of his retirement
savings in index funds.
10
Indexing is to investing what regular exercise and a
low-fat diet are to losing weight: a very good starting point. The burden of proof
should fall on anyone who claims to have a better way.
As I’ve already noted, this chapter is not an investment guide. I’ll leave it to
others to explain the pros and cons of college savings plans, municipal bonds,
variable annuities, and all the other modern investment options. That said, basic
economics can give us a sniff test. It provides us with a basic set of rules to
which any decent investment advice must conform:
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