26 March 2026

Investors Pour Into Vanguard

#
Share This Story

Investors are pouring money into Vanguard Group, the epitome of the hands-off approach to investing, flocking to funds that track market indexes and aren't run by stock pickers or star managers. Vanguard this week is expected to top $3 trillion in assets, the latest in a series of milestones for the mutual-fund giant. The company got help from two investing legends: Warren Buffett and Bill Gross.

The inflow has pushed the mutual-fund giant to almost $3 trillion in assets under management for the first time. The surge is part of a sea change in the fund business in which investors are increasingly opting for products that track the market rather than relying on managers to pick winners.

Vanguard got a huge boost this spring when Warren Buffett gave it a public stamp of approval in March.  Mr. Buffett, 83 years old and with a net worth of $66 billion, wrote that he advised his trustee to put 10% of the cash in short-term government bonds and 90% in a very low-cost S&P 500 index fund (suggested Vanguard's). In the five months that followed, investors poured $5.5 billion into the Vanguard fund, or about three times more than during the same period the previous year.

His recommendation wasn't the only recent milestone for Vanguard. Its Total Stock Market Index fund is now the biggest mutual fund in the world and also surpassed Pimco in the amount of bond fund assets it manages, according to Morningstar.

The company is a pioneer in the accelerating shift toward so-called passively managed products like index funds and exchange-traded funds that track baskets of stocks or other assets. These funds typically promise diversification and are relatively inexpensive compared to traditional mutual funds.

Investors poured a net $336 billion into passively managed stock and bond funds in 2013, handily beating the $53 billion invested in traditional mutual funds of the same type, according to Morningstar. So far this year through July, investors put a net $177 billion into those passive funds, compared with $74 billion in actively managed funds.

The average Vanguard U.S. equity index fund has an expense ratio of 0.1% versus 0.7% for competitors and 1.3% for an actively managed stock fund, according to Morningstar. Traditional stock-fund managers—old-fashioned stock pickers—have been the hardest hit in the wave toward passive investment. Through July, passively managed stock funds have seen a net $128.4 billion in investor inflows, compared with $18 billion for traditional stock funds, according to Morningstar.

The 2008 financial crisis sparked a general disillusionment among investors about traditional stock managers, and some of that has continued today, say analysts and industry observers.

That general sentiment has helped Vanguard. While the firm's index funds aren't actively run by managers, the company as a whole tends to act like a "doting mother.”

Vanguard isn't the only company benefiting from the wave of money flowing into passive products. Vanguard, however, the third-largest provider behind State Street Global Advisors, has seen more investor inflows in the U.S.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal.

Join Our Online Community
Join the Better Way To Retire community and get access to applications, relevant research, groups and blogs. Let us help you Retire Better™
FamilyWealth Social News
Follow Us