| Unlike the traditional market cap weighted S&P 500, each stock in this fund carries the same weight, avoiding overexposure to mega cap companies. (For example, giants like Nvidia and Microsoft represent just 0.2% apiece in this portfolio versus more than 12% in a traditional S&P 500 index fund.) Reduced concentration lessens the risk tied to sector bubbles or individual high-flyers. The equal-weight index also provides a higher yield (1.6% vs 1%), offering more income for investors. Plus, they offer greater participation from small and mid-sized firms, which - believe it or not - have historically provided superior returns to large caps over the long term. As they also have in 2026. What are the drawbacks? Well, you can guess the first: potential underperformance during mega cap tech rallies. Small- and mid-sized stocks can also be more volatile, making the funds themselves a bit more volatile. There is also higher turnover - and thus higher costs. The fund above has an average expense ratio of 0.2%. That's tiny but still twice the expense ratio of the SPDR S&P 500 Trust (NYSE: SPY). Plus, the quarterly rebalancing in an equal-weight fund has tax ramifications. Whereas most index funds are highly tax efficient, these funds occasionally distribute realized capital gains after top performers are trimmed back. That's why equal-weight funds are ideally owned in a qualified retirement plan where they will compound tax-deferred. However, die-hard indexers often say there is a single overriding reason they prefer the market cap weighted approach to an equal-weighted one. Higher returns. No one can argue that equal-weighted index funds have outperformed market-weighted ones over the past few years. They haven't. However, they certainly have over the long haul. Over the past 25 years, in fact, MSCI's U.S. equal-weight index has outperformed its size-weighted counterpart by an average of 1.2 percentage points a year. Some readers may think that's not a big deal. Think again. An investor in an equal-weight fund would be one-third richer at the end of the period. In other words, if your investment in a traditional S&P 500 over the past 25 years grew to $1 million, congratulations! Yet it takes some of the shine off to learn that an identical investment in an equal-weighted index over the same period would have grown to more than $1.3 million. (Or that $10 million would have turned into over $13 million instead.) The second approach required no additional time. No additional work. Just a tiny tweak that made a difference of hundreds of thousands - or millions - of dollars. These are the considerable advantages: less concentration risk, more income, and vastly better long-term performance. If you are a long-term investor with fresh money to put to work today - especially if it's in a retirement account - it should go into an equal-weight index, not a market cap weighted index. And that's especially true with mega cap tech valuations in the stratosphere, as they are today. Good investing, Alex |
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