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Beyond managing funds, Vanguard uses its scale to improve global market infrastructure, such as pushing for the creation of a closing auction in India. By making markets more efficient and transparent, they lower their own transaction costs and improve price discovery, benefiting all investors.
Vanguard founder Jack Bogle initially opposed ETFs, viewing intraday trading as speculation. Leadership overcame this by framing ETFs not as a trading product, but as an 'alternative distribution vehicle' to get their low-cost funds onto brokerage platforms and into advisors' hands, ultimately widening their market.
While international markets have more volatility and lower trust, their biggest advantage is inefficiency. Many basic services are underdeveloped, creating enormous 'low-hanging fruit' opportunities. Providing a great, reliable service in a market where few things work well can create immense and durable value.
Active management is more viable in emerging markets than in the US. The largest EM ETF (EEM) has a high 0.72% expense ratio, the universe of stocks is twice as large as the US, and analyst coverage is sparse. This creates significant opportunities for skilled stock pickers to outperform passive strategies.
The central task for capital allocators is to identify investment managers with a proven, durable edge—be it in sourcing, operations, or strategy—that allows them to consistently capture alpha in markets that are otherwise becoming more efficient.
The dominance of low-cost index funds means active managers cannot compete in liquid, efficient markets. Survival depends on creating strategies in areas Vanguard can't easily replicate, such as illiquid micro-caps, niche geographies, or complex sectors that require specialized data and analysis.
Unlike most firms that separate strategy (portfolio managers) from execution (traders), Vanguard combines them. This unified role enables instantaneous, informed trade-offs between tracking error and value-add opportunities, creating a key operational advantage in indexing.
Vanguard's first index fund had a ~2% expense ratio (180 bps), far from today's near-zero fees. This historical fact shows that for innovative financial products, low costs are an outcome of achieving massive scale, not a viable starting point. Early fees must be high enough to build a sustainable business.
Founder Jack Bogle noted Vanguard's investor-owned structure was never copied because "there's no money in it" for external shareholders. The model's core competitive advantage is its inherent unprofitability for anyone but the end customer, making it unattractive for competitors.
A consistent flow of $3 billion per month from domestic systematic investment plans provides a stable, local buyer base for IPOs. This de-risks private equity exits by reducing reliance on volatile foreign institutional flows, making public markets a more reliable exit path.
Effective index fund management is not passive. Vanguard's teams constantly balance four factors: precise index tracking, minimizing tax impact, reducing market impact from trades, and seeking small outperformance opportunities (positive excess return) from events like corporate actions.