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There's a growing movement to get away from index funds. This year, tech stocks have exploded. ARK Invest has vastly outperformed the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100. Ultra-low interest rates tend to have people going for increasingly high-risk, speculative investments, such as tech companies. The bolder and more futuristic the vision, the better. Obviously, this could end badly as well, but, people are starting to pick individual stocks instead of index funds.


The problem is knowing when to enter and exit the sector-specific funds. It might beat the S&P in a trailing 12 month window, but it's unlikely to do so over a 5 or 10 year window.


> ARK Invest has vastly outperformed the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100.

There are always funds that do better, until they don't:

* https://awealthofcommonsense.com/2020/12/a-short-history-of-...

Over a 15-year timeframe, most fund managers (especially in the US) underperform benchmarks:

* https://www.ifa.com/articles/despite_brief_reprieve_2018_spi...


It will definitely end badly. I guess it’s driven by desperation for returns. Diversification is a risk reduction strategy as old as the Bible; stock picking is not about preserving wealth or growing wealth, it’s about bootstrapping it.




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