Money Heist | Index
This "blind buying" is the core of the heist. The market is no longer a price-discovery mechanism based on fundamentals. It is increasingly a mirror: stocks go up not because the company is performing well, but because a trillion-dollar index fund has a mechanical requirement to buy more shares.
Welcome to the "Index Money Heist"—a term used by critics and skeptics to describe the massive, systemic transfer of wealth from active fund managers to passive index funds, and the potential trap awaiting millions of unsuspecting retail investors. index money heist
The heist began when money started flowing out of expensive active funds and into cheap passive index funds at an accelerating rate. As of 2024, passive index funds (ETFs and mutual funds) now control over in assets, surpassing active funds in the U.S. for the first time. This "blind buying" is the core of the heist
Is the rise of indexing the greatest democratization of wealth in history? Or is it a slow-motion heist where the exits are hidden, the valuations are absurd, and the only winners are the giant asset managers like BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street? Welcome to the "Index Money Heist"—a term used
