Fees on my passive investments there (mostly target date funds) seem to be as low as ever? I don’t care if they offer _more_ options as long as it doesn’t negatively impact their passive business.
Fair point. My thought is they are clearly spending money on tons of people they wouldn't have to if they were strictly passive. Presumably, if they didn't, the fees would be lower than they are now.
Isn't it equally likely the opposite - your comment presumes that Vanguard is using money from passive to prop up active, whereas it could also be that money from active is already being used to lower fees on passive?
I mean even $100 annually compounds to be tens of thousands over a lifetime. Furthermore, Vanguard manages like almost 10 trillion so that ends up being nearly a billion extra extracted per year.
My main issue though is that Vanguard's brand is low-risk passive, but they are now selling high-risk active funds under that brand.
That’s a risk that Vanguard investors in active funds are willing to take. They’re not stupid, investors at Vanguard know that passive is their primary focus. Also the fees for their active funds are lower than average so they have a higher likelihood of success since a lot of the drag on active performance is… high fees.
I like Fidelity (and Vanguard), but at the metric the OP post uses (% employees handling passive products), Fidelity is likely far, far worse than Vanguard - Fidelity has 4 employees for every 1 Vanguard employee. And the whole point of passive products is that you don't have an employee managing a fund whose expenses eat into returns. Vanguard and Fidelity both continue to offer excellent passive products, and Vanguard also continues to cut fee ratios on its passive products, while some of their competitors have been incredibly anti-consumer by launching new lower-fee versions of a fund instead of lowering the fees on their existing fund.
It's also great that Fidelity has their “zero” offerings, but 1) they are mutual funds so considered less tax efficient in the long term if in a taxable account, and 2) can't be transferred to a Fidelity competitor brokerage, which can also be an issue if in a taxable account.
Do you have any evidence that they’re subsidizing US customers? It’s possible the fees are higher in the UK due to it being more expensive to operate the funds.
Most of their funds are incorporated in Ireland (the UK doesn't have native ETFs, they're all European but can be listed on the LSE)
Investors in the UK are not partners in Vanguards mutual structure, and Vanguards UK platform ("Vanguard Investor") is not run by Vanguard but by a third party (FNZ, a New Zealand fintech).
OCF for VT, a global equity index ETF in the US, is 0.06%
UK equivalent (the Global All Cap Index Fund, or perhaps the VWRP All World ETF) is 0.23% and 0.19% respectively, and the latter excludes small caps and both have fewer holdings than VT
Invesco's All World ETF in the UK, tracking the same index is 0.15% and HSBC have an index fund tracking the same index also at 0.13%
Vanguard UK have a 0.15% platform fee whereas the best UK alternatives are completely free.
Vanguard UK recently introduced a minimum nominal platform fee on top which screwed over small investors.
Thanks. Are you sure the cost of the fund is higher because it’s a fund and not an ETF like VT? The platform fee seems strange, but I wonder if other companies collect that fee somewhere else?
Fees on my passive investments there (mostly target date funds) seem to be as low as ever? I don’t care if they offer _more_ options as long as it doesn’t negatively impact their passive business.
Fair point. My thought is they are clearly spending money on tons of people they wouldn't have to if they were strictly passive. Presumably, if they didn't, the fees would be lower than they are now.
Isn't it equally likely the opposite - your comment presumes that Vanguard is using money from passive to prop up active, whereas it could also be that money from active is already being used to lower fees on passive?
And what happens if active fails? Then passive would take the hit even though people go with Vanguard specifically for the low-risk passive.
3 bps instead of 4? That’s a savings of… $100 on a million annually.
I mean even $100 annually compounds to be tens of thousands over a lifetime. Furthermore, Vanguard manages like almost 10 trillion so that ends up being nearly a billion extra extracted per year.
My main issue though is that Vanguard's brand is low-risk passive, but they are now selling high-risk active funds under that brand.
Why should we presume that? It seems equally likely that the fees would have to be higher if not supported by profitable cross-sales.
It's high risk. Sure, if active funds succeed. But active funds fail more often than they succeed.
That’s a risk that Vanguard investors in active funds are willing to take. They’re not stupid, investors at Vanguard know that passive is their primary focus. Also the fees for their active funds are lower than average so they have a higher likelihood of success since a lot of the drag on active performance is… high fees.
Fidelity has been killing it with their passive investing options. Zero expense ratio funds, cash management account.
I am going to switch, will save perhaps 30k in fees over next few decades
I like Fidelity (and Vanguard), but at the metric the OP post uses (% employees handling passive products), Fidelity is likely far, far worse than Vanguard - Fidelity has 4 employees for every 1 Vanguard employee. And the whole point of passive products is that you don't have an employee managing a fund whose expenses eat into returns. Vanguard and Fidelity both continue to offer excellent passive products, and Vanguard also continues to cut fee ratios on its passive products, while some of their competitors have been incredibly anti-consumer by launching new lower-fee versions of a fund instead of lowering the fees on their existing fund.
It's also great that Fidelity has their “zero” offerings, but 1) they are mutual funds so considered less tax efficient in the long term if in a taxable account, and 2) can't be transferred to a Fidelity competitor brokerage, which can also be an issue if in a taxable account.
The zero index funds have slightly more tracking error than the vanguard funds.
Also if you are in taxable I would be worried about being locked in if fidelity start charging fees on them.
I think vanguard is a safer bet to keep fees low long term.
And ultimately 4bps is irrelevant.
Absolutely. Fidelity has been closer to Vanguard's historical reputation than Vanguard itself in recent years.
Permanent summary of my thoughts here: https://ristforever.com/rist/ea70058d-ab78-45e7-81f9-b3a5dce...
You can be held to your words too!
I hate the way Vanguard UK customers subsidize the US business (Fees are lower for US customers than UK ones on comparable funds)
They aren't the cheapest anymore in almost every category, but their brand recognition has exploded here in recent years.
Do you have any evidence that they’re subsidizing US customers? It’s possible the fees are higher in the UK due to it being more expensive to operate the funds.
Most of their funds are incorporated in Ireland (the UK doesn't have native ETFs, they're all European but can be listed on the LSE)
Investors in the UK are not partners in Vanguards mutual structure, and Vanguards UK platform ("Vanguard Investor") is not run by Vanguard but by a third party (FNZ, a New Zealand fintech).
OCF for VT, a global equity index ETF in the US, is 0.06%
UK equivalent (the Global All Cap Index Fund, or perhaps the VWRP All World ETF) is 0.23% and 0.19% respectively, and the latter excludes small caps and both have fewer holdings than VT
Invesco's All World ETF in the UK, tracking the same index is 0.15% and HSBC have an index fund tracking the same index also at 0.13%
Vanguard UK have a 0.15% platform fee whereas the best UK alternatives are completely free.
Vanguard UK recently introduced a minimum nominal platform fee on top which screwed over small investors.
Vanguard are no longer cheap and not on our side.
Thanks. Are you sure the cost of the fund is higher because it’s a fund and not an ETF like VT? The platform fee seems strange, but I wonder if other companies collect that fee somewhere else?
Damn, what?! I didn't know the UK rates were higher. But yeah the old Vanguard brand that Bogle built is strong.