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  2. What Are Index Funds? Definition, Benefits, and How to Invest

    www.aol.com/index-funds-definition-benefits...

    An index fund is a type of mutual fund that doesn’t require a fund manager to hand-pick securities and make decisions about how to spend the pooled money of many investors. With an index fund ...

  3. Asset allocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asset_allocation

    This time, after properly adjusting for the cost of running index funds, the actual returns again failed to beat index returns. The linear correlation between monthly index return series and the actual monthly actual return series was measured at 90.2%, with shared variance of 81.4%. Ibbotson concluded 1) that asset allocation explained 40% of ...

  4. Budget constraint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budget_constraint

    The concept of soft budget constraint is commonly applied to centrally planned economies, later economies in transition. This theory was originally proposed by János Kornai in 1979. It was used to explain the "economic behavior in socialist economies marked by shortage”. [ 2 ]

  5. Index funds: What they are and how to invest in them - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/index-funds-invest-them...

    Index funds are typically passively managed, meaning there is no active manager to pay. Rather than trying to bet on individual stocks to beat the market, an index fund simply aims to “be the ...

  6. Index fund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_fund

    An index fund (also index tracker ... The difference between the index performance and the fund performance is called the "tracking error", or, colloquially, "jitter".

  7. What are the different types of index funds? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/different-types-index-funds...

    Equal weight index funds solve this issue by having each holding in the fund make up roughly the same percentage of fund assets. If a fund has 100 holdings, each one will account for about 1 ...

  8. Core & Satellite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_&_Satellite

    Core & Satellite Portfolio Management is an investment strategy that incorporates traditional fixed-income and equity-based securities (i.e., index funds, [1] exchange-traded funds (ETFs), passive mutual funds, etc.), known as the "core" portion of the portfolio, with a percentage of selected individual securities in the fixed-income and equity-based side of the port [2] folio known as the ...

  9. Covered bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covered_bond

    Hard-bullet covered bonds: payments have to be made when due according to the original schedule. Failure to pay on the Standard Maturity Date (SMD) triggers default of the covered bonds, and the covered bonds accelerate. Until a few years ago, hard bullet structures were regarded as market practice.