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Motley Fool's 'Best Funds' List Is Really Dumb

06/08/07 - Investing Tips

When you spot an article titled 'The Market's 10 Best Funds', you might be tempted to think that if you'd read it you'd get a list of ten great mutual funds that are set to produce market beating returns in the years ahead. Not so for readers of a recent posting on The Motley Fool. Readers who clicked on that snappy headline were treated not to a list of inexpensive, high-quality funds in undervalued categories, but merely a list of the top performing funds of the last ten years:

As we are sure the decidedly un-foolish readers of MAXfunds.com know, one way to all but guarantee poor returns going forward is to buy funds based on past performance. Of the funds that topped the ten-year performance charts back in 2000 (Invesco Technology II [FTCHX], T. Rowe Price Science & Tech [PRSCX], Spectra [SPECX], RS Emerging Growth [RSEGX], Janus Twenty [JAVLX], Managers Captl Appreciation [MGCAX], Dreyfus Founders Discovery F [FDISX], Janus Venture [JAVTX], American Cent Ultra Inv [TWCUX], Fidelity Growth Company [FDGRX]) none have since performed better than the S&P 500.

The Motley Fool's list of 'Best Funds' is actually more likely to under perform the market going forward than funds chosen at random. That's not just foolish, it's stupid.

Bob Barker is Your Financial Advisor

Chuck Jaffe at Marketwatch compares fund investing to games features on the 'Price is Right'. While the analogy is a touch strained, the concepts are sound:

1. The Bargain Game: Investors looking to buy a fund ultimately should boil their picks down to a select few, and then go bargain hunting. In this case, that means examining a side-by-side description of the funds to see how they intend to accomplish their investment objective. If two funds take the same strategy, the better bargain is clearly the fund with the lowest expense ratio; if they take different strategies in the same asset class, picking the better bargain will mean balancing any additional costs against an expectation of higher returns. If a fund can't convince you that it can deliver more for your money, it's no bargain compared to a lower-cost competitor.

2. Triple Play: The idea is to hit the big prize -- a fund you can count on, that can deliver to your expectations -- in several different asset classes. The first fund tends to be easy -- because it's a broad, safe choice with the fewest chances to go wrong -- but expanding your holdings into sectors, international stocks and more makes subsequent choices more difficult. To win, an investor must own several high-quality funds that move independently, so that a market nose-dive doesn't do permanent damage and scare the investor to dump the whole thing.

3. That's Too Much: In mutual funds, this is a contest investors should play when looking at a fund's expense ratio, and they can win if they remember one simple playing hint. For a stock fund, the ''too much'' number is 1.25 percent; for a bond fund, it's 0.75 percent.

Those numbers keep a fund slightly below average for their broad category; upon seeing costs above those levels, say ''That's Too Much!'' and consider whether it's worth the excess costs. Moreover, solid funds with numbers well below those averages are showing you a key reason for their success.

4. Take Two: In fund investing, the dollar target is the amount needed to be ''set for life,'' to achieve the ultimate goal of lifetime financial security. The key is picking mutual funds -- a few from the thousands of available choices -- that the investor believes can turn current and future savings into that jackpot.

To play successfully, investors should determine their target number, the amount needed to actually reach their goals; this makes the rest of the savings and investment process easier, as it makes it possible to determine the returns needed from funds in order to reach the goal. If your funds can't deliver those necessary returns, investment and/or savings habits most likely need to be changed or the game may be lost."

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What Does the GDP Announcement Mean for Powerfund Investors?

We use several strategies to add value to your portfolio. We select high-quality funds in areas that are currently out of favor, we increase stock allocations when stocks fall out of favor, and we cut back on stocks when they return to popularity. This article addresses the last strategy.

Morningstar Picks – No Better Than Dartboard?

Fund ratings giant Morningstar recently released its quarterly list of fund analyst picks, and the results are disturbing.

When it comes to picking domestic stock funds, Morningstar’s analysts – professionals armed with boatloads of data and all-access passes to fund managers – actually do worse than the average investor casually picking index funds, and they seem to do no better in some fund categories than the same investor throwing darts. The implications for casual individual investors are startling.

Last quarter, we noted that their “batting average” was only slightly better than your standard dart-thrower and worse than buying index funds, but when their picks are parsed into different fund groupings, the numbers are surprisingly poor, and highlight how difficult fund picking can be, even for the experts

"...our five-year average was 65%. That means that our picks have been winners about two thirds of the time over the past three and five-year periods. We think that's solid."

As we’ve noted before, index funds generally beat their fund category average over 65% of the time. But even this measure of success belies the trouble picking funds in the key area of domestic stock funds – which is where most investors maintain the bulk of their fund holdings. Morningstar now sheds a little light on this issue:

"It's interesting to note that by asset class, the weighted batting averages show our picks have been more successful in foreign stocks, municipal bonds, and taxable bonds, and less so with domestic equity. For example, 98% of our foreign large-blend picks have been winners over the past five years, while just 50% of our domestic large-blend picks have been winners."

50% is pathetic. Any dart-thrower could expect to beat the large-blend fund category average (not the benchmark index) at least 50% of the time (half would beat, half would lose).

Morningstar does not detail their performance in other domestic stock fund categories like small-cap and mid-cap value, growth, and blend. They do state the following, however:

"Using the aggregate measure, our domestic-equity picks (excluding sector funds) returned 9.56% versus 7.76% for the Wilshire 5000 and 6.27% for the S&P 500. We're pleased with those figures, too, but recognize that market-cap bias has a hand in that success."

Market-cap bias had more than a hand in it. Fund investors may not realize just how badly large-cap growth funds have performed in comparison to other fund categories in recent years.

At the end of the first quarter of 2007, looking at the past five years (2002-2007), the ONLY fund category that underperformed the S&P 500 was large-cap growth (ironically, this is the fund category where most domestic five-star funds could be found back in 2000 before Morningstar adjusted their ratings system to look at performance in category as opposed to performance against all domestic stock funds). The large-cap blend funds' performance nearly tied with the S&P 500 in a dead heat. In other words, the dartboard fund pick from each domestic fund category (there are nine) had a 77% chance of beating the S&P 500. Five out of nine domestic stock fund categories beat the market cap-weighted Wilshire 5000. If you'd matched the domestic stock fund category averages over the past five years, you'd have beaten the Wilshire 5000.

Sometimes it's very easy to pick winners in a certain category. Bond-fund picking is all about expense ratio. There are scores of bond funds out there with total expense ratios (including 12b-1 fees) over 1%. How in the world are these funds going to perform well with bond yields around 5%? As Morningstar notes,

"In bondland, we've enjoyed a lot of success in core categories such as intermediate bond and muni national long where our batting averages are more than 90%."

As the performance of large-cap stocks improves, it will become even more difficult for fund picks to beat benchmark indexes. The typical stock fund has an average market cap lower than a market cap-weighted benchmark index.

Bottom line - picking winning funds is at best difficult, and often a total crapshoot. Many investors and even Morningstar analysts are too easily swayed by good past performance. They ignore or downplay expenses, fund asset size, reversion to the mean, and plain old luck. The vast majority of investors (and those that choose funds for 401(k) plans) should just go with index funds – if they do, they’ll probably beat Morningstar's analysts.