What I Look For In a Mutual Fund Family

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Reading the papers, I see all kinds of garbage about mutual funds. Probably the biggest single piece of garbage is that only the so-called "no load" funds are any good. They focus only on the cost of the "loaded" fund, as if there is no benefit to be had from the fact that the "load" pays a professional advisor to help you out. Indeed, it has been well established by DALBAR that net returns of investors with paid advisors, in aggregate, tend to significantly outperform those of investors without.



It's not just investment knowledge, no matter how much people protest that they know every bit as much as the professionals. If you aren't, you don't. It's investor psychology and not being so emotionally involved in the problems and knowing what to do in the first place so as not to spend so much of your money on basic mistakes. This isn't play money you're working with, and if it was, the experience wouldn't help when it came to making real investments. When you don't get do-overs, and the time you've lost and wasted is the worst thing about the situation, and when the average investor makes three avoidable mistakes costing twenty percent or more of their portfolio value, five percent plus a quarter of a percent per year doesn't look like such a bad investment. On the same theory that a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client, show me a financial advisor who handles his own "big money" without paying for advice and I'll show you an advisor to stay away from.



With that said, some people are bound and determined to do it all themselves. That's fine, so long as you admit to yourself that it's likely to cost you money, and that the ego thing is more important to you than the money.



What I look for, what most professionals look for, in a mutual fund family, is three things. Good Asset Class coverage. Sticking to a fund's stated modes. Willingness to change a fund management if the performance lags the class over time.



Good Asset Class coverage has to do with the standard categories of funds. Small versus large versus mid cap. Value versus Income versus growth. Bonds versus stocks. I want to see funds within the family that "hit the corners". Large Cap Growth, Small Cap Growth, Large Cap Value, Small Cap Value, Investment bond, Government bond, "High Yield" bond (aka "junk"), Income, and preferably multiple international choices as well. I may not put money in every category, but I want it available to me. I insist that Value be Value, not "growth and income." Real Value funds are harder to "sell" laypersons on, but long term, they tend to outperform growth.



The second thing I want is that the management sticks with the fund's asset class, and doesn't play funny games with the definition. I don't like funds that break type to chase today's returns. A full explanation as to why is beyond the scope of this essay, but For a quick illustration: A few years ago, there was a very hot no-load fund family. Literally top of the demand curve. Everyone wanted their funds. They advertised like hell to attract business, and it worked. They got almost fifty percent of the money coming into mutual funds for a while - and every single fund of theirs put their money into basically the same companies. I did a comparison on them and could not find two of their funds with less than a forty percent investment overlap. This was basically using increased demand to drive price, and hence, temporary paper returns. But this couldn't last, and they went from being the darlings of the market to absolute bottom in one year.



The third of the most important things that I look for is willingness to replace a bad fund manager on behalf of the family management. I'm not looking for immediate replacement if they lag the class for one quarter. I'm looking for family management that is willing to replace someone that consistently lags the class over time. This is harder to get than you might think. Typically by the time that someone has risen to fund manager, they've been with the family for a while and know where most of the bodies are buried. "Charlie" who heads the family goes golfing every week with "George" who's doing a rotten job and deserves to be replaced, but you don't fire your golfing partner. It's all among friends, right? Well, no. It's my money this clown is wasting.



There are a couple other things that are highly beneficial. Limited number of investments, preferably a maximum number set in the prospectus. Twenty to thirty investments is the optimal tradeoff between diversification and dilution, and most funds are too dilute. Availability of Sector funds is also a big plus. But none of them is as important as the big three.



Caveat Emptor.

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Dan Melson published on July 29, 2006 10:00 AM.

Links and Minifeatures 07 27 Thursday was the previous entry in this blog.

What Pre-Approval Should Mean is the next entry in this blog.

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