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Investing · 2 min read

Index funds vs stock picking — what the math actually says

An honest comparison of indexing and active stock picking, with the numbers that should drive your decision.

By Jarviix Editors · Mar 9, 2026

Candlestick chart on a laptop screen used for stock analysis
Photo by Nicholas Cappello on Unsplash

The "active vs passive" debate has been running for fifty years and the data has been pointing in one direction for at least the last twenty. That doesn't make stock picking pointless — but it does make the bar for doing it deliberately a lot higher.

The case for indexing, briefly

A market-cap-weighted index fund owns the whole market, in proportion. The strategy is mechanical, transparent, and cheap.

The case for it rests on three observations:

  1. By construction, the average actively-managed dollar must equal the index minus costs. Active investors trade with each other; for every winner there's a loser. After fees, the average active dollar must underperform.
  2. Manager skill is real but rare and hard to identify in advance. S&P's SPIVA reports consistently show ~75–85% of active managers underperforming their benchmark over 10-year windows.
  3. Costs compound brutally. A 1% fee difference, compounded over 30 years, eats roughly 25% of your final wealth.

For most people, in most markets, a low-cost index fund is the strategy that wins by losing the least.

When stock picking earns its place

Active stock picking can absolutely beat the index — for managers and individuals who:

  • Have a real edge (information, analytical, or temperamental) that they can articulate clearly.
  • Concentrate in a few high-conviction positions rather than diluting into 50 stocks.
  • Have a multi-year holding horizon and the temperament to look wrong for years.
  • Keep frictions (taxes, commissions, fund expenses) low.

If those conditions don't apply to you, you're effectively running an expensive, undiversified version of the index.

The middle path that often makes sense

You don't have to choose all-or-nothing.

A common, defensible structure:

  • Core (70–90%) — broad, low-cost index funds. Domestic plus international.
  • Satellite (10–30%) — direct stock picks, sector ETFs, or thematic positions where you have specific conviction.

This keeps your wealth tied to the market's long-term compounding while letting you express views without betting the farm on them.

What actually matters more than this debate

How much you save and for how long matters more than whether you index or pick. The investor who saves 20% of their income for thirty years into average funds will almost always beat the investor who saves 5% into the perfect stocks.

Get the savings rate right first. Then optimise the strategy.

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