TCW/Gargoyle Hedged Value (TFHVX/TFHIX), September 2015

By David Snowball

This fund has been liquidated.

Objective and strategy

TCW/Gargoyle Hedged Value seeks long-term capital appreciation while exposing investors to less risk than broad stock market indices. The strategy is to hold a diversified portfolio mid- to large-cap value stocks, mostly domestic, and to hedge part of the stock market risk by selling a blend of index call options. In theory, the mix will allow investors to enjoy most of the market’s upside while being buffered for a fair chunk of its downside.

Adviser

TCW. TCW, based in Los Angeles, was founded in 1971 as Trust Company of the West. About $140 billion of that are in fixed income assets. The Carlyle Group owns about 60% of the adviser while TCW’s employees own the remainder. They advise 22 TCW funds, as well as nine Metropolitan West funds with a new series of TCW Alternative funds in registration. As of June 30, 2015, the firm had about $180 billion in AUM; of that, $18 billion resides in TCW funds and $76 billion in the mostly fixed-income MetWest funds.

Manager

Joshua B. Parker and Alan Salzbank. Messrs. Parker and Salzbank are the Managing Partners of Gargoyle Investment Advisor, LLC. They were the architects of the combined strategy and managed the hedge fund which became RiverPark/Gargoyle, and now TCW/Gargoyle, and also oversee about a half billion in separate accounts. Mr. Parker, a securities lawyer by training is also an internationally competitive bridge player (Gates, Buffett, Parker…) and there’s some reason to believe that the habits of mind that make for successful bridge play also makes for successful options trading. They both have over three decades of experience and all of the investment folks who support them at Gargoyle have at least 20 years of experience in the industry.

Strategy capacity and closure

The managers estimate that they could manage about $2 billion in the stock portion of the portfolio and a vastly greater sum in the large, liquid options market. TCW appears not to have any clear standards controlling fund closures.

Active share

“Active share” measures the degree to which a fund’s portfolio differs from the holdings of its benchmark portfolio. High active share indicates management which is providing a portfolio that is substantially different from, and independent of, the index. An active share of zero indicates perfect overlap with the index, 100 indicates perfect independence. Gargoyle has calculated the active share of the equity portion of the portfolio but is legally constrained from making that information public. Given the portfolio’s distinctive construction, it’s apt to be reasonably high.

Management’s stake in the fund

As of January 2014, the managers had $5 million invested in the strategy (including $500,000 in this fund). Gargoyle Partners and employees have over $10 million invested in the strategy.

Opening date

The strategy was originally embodied in a hedge fund which launched December 31, 1999. The hedge fund converted to a mutual fund on April 30, 2012. TCW adopted the RiverPark fund on June 26, 2015.

Minimum investment

$5000, reduced to $1000 for retirement accounts. There’s also an institutional share class (TFHIX) with a $1 million minimum and 1.25% expense ratio.

Expense ratio

1.50%, after waivers, on assets of $74.5 million, as of July, 2015.

Comments

Shakespeare was right. Juliet, the world’s most famously confused 13-year-old, decries the harm that a name can do:

‘Tis but thy name that is my enemy;
Thou art thyself, though not a Montague.
What’s Montague? it is nor hand, nor foot,
Nor arm, nor face, nor any other part
Belonging to a man. O, be some other name!
What’s in a name? that which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call’d,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title.

Her point is clear: people react to the name, no matter how little sense that makes. In many ways, they make the same mistake with this fund. The word “hedged” as the first significant term of the name leads many people to think “low volatility,” “mild-mannered,” “market neutral” or something comparable. Those who understand the fund’s strategy recognize that it isn’t any of those things.

The Gargoyle fund has two components. The fund combines an unleveraged long portfolio and a 50% short portfolio, for a steady market exposure of 50%. The portfolio rebalances between those strategies monthly, but monitors and trades its options portfolio “in real time” throughout the month.

The long portfolio is 80-120 stocks, and stock selection is algorithmic. They screen the 1000 largest US stocks on four valuation criteria (price to book, earnings, cash flow and sales) and then assign a “J score” to each stock based on how its current valuation compares with (1) its historic valuation and (2) its industry peers’ valuation. They then buy the hundred most undervalued stocks, but maintain sector weightings that are close to the S&P 500’s.

The options portfolio is index call options. At base, they’re selling insurance policies to nervous investors. Those policies pay an average premium of 2% per month and rise in value as the market falls. That 2% is a long-term average, during the market panic in the fall of 2008, their options were generating 8% per month in premiums.

Why index calls? Two reasons: (1) they are systematically mispriced, and so they generate more profit (or suffer less of a loss) than they theoretically should. Apparently anxious investors are not as price-sensitive as they should be. In particular, these options are overpriced by about 35 basis points per month 88% of the time. For sellers such as Gargoyle, that means something like a 35 bps free lunch. Moreover, (2) selling calls on their individual stocks – that is, betting that the stocks in their long portfolio will fall – would reduce returns. They believe that their long portfolio is a collection of stocks superior to any index and so they don’t want to hedge away any of their stock-specific upside. By managing their options overlay, the team can react to changes in the extent to which their investors are exposed to the stock markets movements. At base, as they sell more index options, they reduce the degree to which the fund is exposed to the market. Their plan is to keep net market exposure somewhere in the range of 35-65%, with a 50% average and a healthy amount of income.

On whole, the strategy works.

The entire strategy has outperformed the S&P. Since inception, its returns have roughly doubled those of the S&P 500. It’s done so with modestly less volatility.

Throughout, it has sort of clubbed its actively-managed long-short peers. More significantly, it has substantially outperformed the gargantuan Gateway Fund (GATEX). At $7.8 billion, Gateway is – for many institutions and advisors – the automatic go-to fund for an options-hedged portfolio. It’s not clear to me that it should be. Here’s the long-term performance of Gateway (green) versus Gargoyle (blue):

GATEX

Two things stand out: an initial investment in Gargoyle fifteen years ago would have returned more than twice as much as the same investment at the same time in Gateway (or the S&P 500). That outperformance is neither a fluke nor a one-time occurrence: Gargoyle leads Gateway over the past one, three, five, seven and ten-year periods as well.

The second thing that stands out is Gargoyle’s weak performance in the 2008 crash. The fund’s maximum drawdown was 48%, between 10/07 and 03/09. The managers attribute that loss to the nature of the fund’s long portfolio: it buys stocks in badly dented companies when the price of the stock is even lower than the company’s dents would warrant. Unfortunately in the meltdown, those were the stocks people least wanted to own so they got killed. The fund’s discipline kept them from wavering: they stayed 100% invested and rebalanced monthly to buy more of the stocks that were cratering. The payback come in 2009 when they posted a 42% return against the S&P’s 26% and again in 2010 when they made 18% to the index’s 15%.

The managers believe that ’08 was exceptional, and note that the strategy actually made money from 2000-02 when the market suffered from the bursting of the dot-com bubble. Morty Schaja, president of River Park Funds, notes that “We are going to have meltdowns in the future, but it is unlikely that they will play out the same way as it did 2008 . . . a market decline that is substantial but lasts a long time, would play better for Gargoyle that sells 1-2% option premium and therefore has that as a cushion every month as compared to a sudden drop in one quarter where they are more exposed. Similarly, a market decline that experiences movement from growth stocks to value stocks would benefit a Gargoyle, as compared to a 2008.” I concur. Just as the French obsession with avoiding a repeat of WW1 led to the disastrous decision to build the Maginot Line in the 1930s, so an investor’s obsession with avoiding “another ‘08” will lead him badly astray.

What about the ETF option? Josh and Alan anticipate clubbing the emerging bevy of buy-write ETFs. The guys identify two structural advantages they have over an ETF: (1) they buy stocks superior to those in broad indexes, and (2) they manage their options portfolio moment by moment, while the ETF just sits and takes hits for 29 out of 30 days each month.

There’s evidence that they’re right. The ETFs are largely based on the CBOE S&P Buy-Write Index (BXM). Between 2000 and 2012, the S&P 500 returned 24% and the BXM returned 52%; the options portion of the Gargoyle portfolio returned 110% while the long portfolio crushed the S&P.

Nonetheless, investors need to know that returns are lumpy; it’s quite capable of beating the S&P 500 for three or four years in a row, and then trailing it for the next three or four. The fund’s returns are not highly correlated with the returns of the S&P 500; the fund may lose money when the index makes money, and vice versa. That’s true in the short term – it beat the S&P 500 during August’s turbulence but substantially trailed during the quieter July – as well as the long-term. All of that is driven by the fact that this is a fairly aggressive value portfolio. In years when value investing is out of favor and momentum rules the day, the fund will lag.

Bottom line

On average and over time, a value-oriented portfolio works. It outperforms growth-oriented portfolios and generally does so with lower volatility. On average and over time, an options overlay works and an actively-managed one works better. It generates substantial income and effectively buffers market volatility with modest loss of upside potential. There will always be periods, such as the rapidly rising market of the past several years, where their performance is merely solid rather than spectacular. That said, Messrs. Parker and Salzbank have been doing this and doing this well for decades. What’s the role of the fund in a portfolio? For the guys, it’s virtually 100% of their US equity exposure. In talking with investors, they discuss it as a substitute for a large-cap value investment; so if your asset allocation plan is 20% LCV, then you could profitably invest up to 20% of your portfolio in Gargoyle. Indeed, the record suggests “very profitably.”

Fund website

TCW/Gargoyle Hedged Value homepage. If you’re a fan of web video, there’s even a sort of infomercial for Gargoyle on Vimeo but relatively little additional information on the Gargoyle Group website.

Fact Sheet

[cr2015]

Manning & Napier Pro-Blend Conservative (EXDAX), September 2015

By David Snowball

Objective and strategy

The fund’s first objective is to provide preservation of capital. Its secondary concerns are to provide income and long-term growth of capital. The fund invests primarily in fixed-income securities. It tilts toward shorter-term, investment grade issues while having the ability to go elsewhere when the opportunities are compelling. It also invests in foreign and domestic stocks, with a preference for dividend-paying equities. Finally, it may invest a bit in a managed futures strategy as a hedge. In general, though, bonds are 55-85% of the portfolio. In the past five years, stocks have accounted for 25-35% of the portfolio though they might be about 10% higher or lower if conditions warrant.

Adviser

Manning & Napier. Manning & Napier was founded in 1970 by Bill Manning and Bill Napier. They’re headquartered near Rochester, NY, with offices in Columbus, OH, Chicago and St. Petersburg. They serve a diversified client base of high-net-worth individuals and institutions, including 401(k) plans, pension plans, Taft-Hartley plans, endowments and foundations. It’s a publicly-traded company (symbol: MN) with $43 billion in assets under management. Of that, about $18 billion are in their team-managed mutual funds and the remainder in a series of separately-managed accounts.

Manager

The fund is managed by a seven-person team, headed by Jeffrey Herrmann and Marc Tommasi. Both of them have been with the fund since its launch. The same team manages all of Manning & Napier’s Pro-Blend and Target Date funds.

Management’s stake in the fund

We generally look for funds where the managers have placed a lot of their own money to work beside yours.  The managers work as a team on about 10 funds. While few of them have any investment in this particular fund, virtually all have large investments between the various Pro-Blend and Lifestyle funds.

Opening date

November 1, 1995.

Minimum investment

$2,000. That is reduced to $25 if you sign up for an automatic monthly investing plan.

Expense ratio

0.88% on $384.1 million in assets, as of July 2023.

Comments

Pro-Blend Conservative offers many of the same attractions as Vanguard STAR (VGSTX) but does so with a more conservative asset allocation. Here are three arguments on its behalf.

First, the fund invests in a way that is broadly diversified and pretty conservative. The portfolio holds something like 200 stocks and 500 bonds, plus a few dozen other holdings. Collectively those represent perhaps 25 different asset classes. No stock position occupies as much as 1% of the portfolio and it currently has much less direct foreign investment than its peers.

Second, Manning & Napier is very good. The firm does lots of things right, and they’ve been doing it right for a long while. Their funds are all team-managed, which tends to produce more consistent, risk-conscious decisions. Their staff’s bonuses are tied to the firm’s goal of absolute returns, so if investors lose money, the analysts suffer, too. The management teams are long-tenured – as with this fund, 20 year stints are not uncommon – and most managers have substantial investments alongside yours.

Third, Pro-Blend Conservative works. Their strategy is to make money by not losing money. That helps explain a paradoxical finding: they might make only half as much as the stock market in a good year but they managed to outperform the stock market over the past 15. Why? Because they haven’t had to dig themselves out of deep holes first. The longer a bull market goes on, the less obvious that advantage is. But once the market turns choppy, it reasserts itself.

At the same time, the fund has the ability to become more aggressive when conditions warrant.  It just does so carefully. Chris Petrosino, one of the Managing Directors at Manning, explained it this way:

We have the ability to be more aggressive. For us, that’s based on current market conditions, fundamentals, pricing and valuations. It may appear contrarian, but valuations dictate our actions. We use those valuations that we see in various asset classes (not only in equities), as our road map. We use our flexibility to invest where we see opportunities, which means that our portfolio often looks very different than the benchmark.

Bottom Line

Pro-Blend Conservative has been a fine performer since launch. It has returned over 6% since launch and 5.4% annually over the past 15 years. That’s about 1% per year better than either the Total Stock Market or its conservative peers. In general, the fund has managed to make between 4-5% each year; more importantly, it has made money for its investors in 19 of the past 20 years. It is an outstanding first choice for cautious investors.

Fund website

Manning & Napier Pro-Blend Conservative homepage. 

Fact Sheet

[cr2015]

September 2015, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

American Beacon Bridgeway Large Cap Growth Fund

American Beacon Bridgeway Large Cap Growth Fund will seek long-term total return on capital, primarily through capital appreciation.  Bridgeway is selling their LCG fund to American Beacon, pending shareholder approval. The fund will still be managed by John Montgomery and the Bridgeway team. The initial expense ratio will be 1.20%, rather above the current Bridgeway charge. The minimum initial investment is $2500. 

Aristotle Small Cap Equity Fund

Aristotle Small Cap Equity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in high quality, small cap businesses that are undervalued. The fund will be managed by David Adams and Jack McPherson. The initial expense ratio will be 1.15%. The minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Aristotle Value Equity Fund

Aristotle Value Equity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing mostly in undervalued mid- and large-cap stocks. The fund will be managed by Howard Gleicher, Aristotle’s CIO. The initial expense ratio will be 0.68%. The minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Aston/River Road Focused Absolute Value Fund

Aston/River Road Focused Absolute Value Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation. The plan is to deploy that “proprietary Absolute Value® approach,” in hopes of providing “attractive, sustainable, low volatility returns over the long term.”  The fund will be managed by Andrew Beck, River Road’s CEO, and Thomas Forsha, their co-CIO. The initial expense ratio will be 1.26%. The minimum initial investment is $2,500, reduced to $500 for various sorts of tax-advantaged accounts..

Brown Advisory Equity Long/Short Fund

Brown Advisory Equity Long/Short Fund will seek to provide long-term capital appreciation by combining both “long” and “short” equity strategies. The plan is pretty straight forward: go long on securities with “few or no undesirable traits” and short the ugly ones. They have the option of using a wide variety of instruments (direct purchase, ETFs, futures and so on) to achieve that exposure. The fund will be managed by Paul Chew, Brown Advisory’s CIO and former manager of the Growth Equity fund. The initial expense ratio will be 2.24% for Investor shares and 2.49% for Advisor shares. The minimum initial investment is $5,000 for Investor shares and $2000 for Advisor shares, which are designed to be purchased through places like Scottrade. .

Dana Small Cap Equity Fund

Dana Small Cap Equity Fund will seek long-term growth. The plan is to create a risk-managed portfolio by using a sector-neutral, relative-value, equal-weight discipline. The large cap version of the strategy has been around for five years and has been perfectly respectable if not particularly distinguished for good or ill. The fund will be managed by a team from Dana Investment Advisers. The initial expense ratio will be 1.20%. The minimum initial investment is $1,000.

Driehaus Turnaround Opportunities Fund

Driehaus Turnaround Opportunities Fund will seek to maximize capital appreciation, while minimizing the risk of permanent capital impairment, over full-economic cycles.. The plan is to invest in the equity and debt securities of “distressed, stressed and leveraged companies,” on the popular premise that they’re widely misunderstood and their securities are often incorrectly priced. The fund will be managed by Elizabeth Cassidy and Thomas McCauley of Driehaus. The initial expense ratio has not been released. The minimum initial investment is $10,000 for retail accounts, reduced to $2000 for retirement accounts.

Ensemble Fund

Ensemble Fund will seek long term capital appreciation. The plan is to identify 15-25 high quality companies with undervalued stock, then buy some. The fund will be managed by Sean Stannard-Stockton, Ensemble’s president and CIO. The initial expense ratio will be 2.0%. The minimum initial investment is $5,000, reduced to $1000 for IRAs and accounts established with an automatic investment plan.

FFI Diversified US Equity Fund

FFI Diversified US Equity Fund will seek long-term capital growth. The plan is to invest in 40-50 U.S. stocks, with a target portfolio market cap of $20 billion. The fund will be managed by a team from FormulaFolio Investments, led by CIO James Wenk. The initial expense ratio will be a stout 2.25%. The prospectus doesn’t offer any immediate evidence that the guys will overcome a high expense ratio in such a competitive slice of the market. The minimum initial investment is $2,000, reduced to $1,000 for retirement accounts and those established with an automatic investing plan.

Gripman Absolute Value Balanced Fund

Gripman Absolute Value Balanced Fund will seek long-term total return and income. The plan is to pursue a conservative asset allocation on the order of 30% equity/70% intermediate-term fixed income. A sliver might be in junk bonds. The fund will be managed by Timothy W. Bond. The initial expense ratio hasn’t been announced. The minimum initial investment is $2,000.

Harbor Diversified International All Cap Fund

Harbor Diversified International All Cap Fund  will seek long-term growth of capital. The plan is to invest mostly in cyclical companies, which you typically buy when they look absolutely ghastly and sell as soon as they start looking decent. The fund will be managed by a very large team led by William J. Arah from Marathon Asset Management, a London-based adviser. Mr. Arah founded Marathon, which also serves as sub-advisor to Vanguard Global Equity. The initial expense ratio will be 1.22%. The minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Iron Equity Premium Income Fund

Iron Equity Premium Income Fund will seek to provide superior risk-adjusted total returns relative to the CBOE S&P 500 BuyWrite Index (BXM). The plan is to buy ETFs which track the S&P 500 while writing call options to generate income. The fund will be managed by a team from IRON Financial. The initial expense ratio will be 1.45%. The minimum initial investment is $10,000.

Preserver Alternative Opportunities Fund

Preserver Alternative Opportunities Fund will seek high total returns with low volatility. The plan is to hire sub-advisers to do pretty typical liquid alts stuff in the portfolio. The subs have not yet been named, though. The initial expense ratio will be 2.43%. The minimum initial investment is $2,000.

Quantified Self-Adjusting Trend Following Fund

Quantified Self-Adjusting Trend Following Fund (really? It feels like they consulted with Willy Wonka to select their name.)  will seek “high appreciation on an annual basis consistent with a high tolerance for risk.” Do you suppose it’s really seeking a high tolerance for risk, or merely requires that prospective investors have a high tolerance?  The plan is to determine the market’s trend, then invest in ETFs, leveraged ETFs or inverse ETFs. If there’s no discernible trend, they’ll invest in bonds. The fund will be managed by Jerry Wagner, President of the Flexible Plan Investments, and Dr. Z. George Yang, their director of research. The initial expense ratio will be 1.75%. The minimum initial investment is $10,000.

T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Index Fund

T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Index Fund will seek to match the performance of the Russell Select Midcap Completion Index, with a correlation of at least 0.95. The fund will be managed by Ken D. Uematsu. The initial expense ratio will be 0.32%.

T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Index Fund

T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Index Fund will seek to match the performance of the Russell 2000®Index with a correlation of at least 0.95. The fund will be managed by Ken D. Uematsu. The initial expense ratio will be 0.34%.

Manager changes, August 2015

By Chip

Because bond fund managers, traditionally, had made relatively modest impacts of their funds’ absolute returns, Manager Changes typically highlights changes in equity and hybrid funds.

Ticker Fund Out with the old In with the new Dt
AISCX Acuitas International Small Cap Fund Mike Jolin is no longer listed as a portfolio manager to the fund. Preston Brown has joined Dennis Jensen, Christopher Tessin, Jonathan Brodsky, Drew Edwards, Marco Priani, Bram Zeigler, and Regina Chi on the management team. 8/15
AFXAX American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund GAM International Management is no longer listed as a subadvisor to the fund, therefore Timothy Haywood and Daniel Sheard will no longer serve as portfolio managers. Payden & Rygel are new subadvisors to the fund, bringing Brian Matthews, Scott Weiner, and Brad Boyd to the management team. 8/15
AAIFX Anchor Alternative Income Fund Anchor Capital Management Group, Inc. will no longer manage any portion of the assets of the fund; Garrett Waters and Eric Leake will be removed as portfolio managers. Joel Price will be the sole portfolio manager 8/15
BIOPX Baron Opportunity Fund No one, but Michael Lippert will be recovering from a bicycle accident. While Mssr. Lippert recovers, Alex Umansky, Neal Rosenberg, and Ashim Mehra, will temporarily co-manage the fund. 8/15
BAMIX BMO Multi-Asset Income Fund Jeff Weniger is no longer listed as a portfolio manager to the fund. Lowell Yura and Jon Adams join Brent Schutte in managing the fund 8/15
CALSX Calamos Long/Short Fund Daniel Fu is no longer listed as a portfolio manager to the fund. Gary Black, John Calamos, and Matthew Wolfson remain on the fund 8/15
CSMIX Columbia Small Cap Value Fund John Barrett is no longer listed as a portfolio manager to the fund. Jeremy Javidi remains as the sole manager of the fund 8/15
BTAEX Deutsche EAFE Equity Index Fund Joseph LaPorta is no longer listed as a portfolio manager Patrick Dwyer joins Thomas O’Brien in managing the fund 8/15
DTMAX Dreyfus Total Emerging Markets Fund No one, but . . . Sean Fitzgibbon and Alexander Kozhemiakin are joined by Federico Garcia Zamora, Jay Malikowski and Josephine Shea. 8/15
ECCGX Eaton Vance Greater China Growth Fund Lily Jap is no longer listed as a portfolio manager to the fund. Stephen Ma and June Lui remain on the fund 8/15
FAGOX Fidelity Advisor Growth Opportunities Fund Gopal Reddy is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Long time manager Steven Wymer returns, joined by Kyle Weaver. 8/15
FAOFX Fidelity Advisor Series Growth Opportunities Gopal Reddy is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Kyle Weaver and Steven Wymer have taken over the fund. 8/15
VEEEX Global Strategic Income Fund Matthew Benkendorf is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Gary Friedle, Stuart Shikiar, and Albert Sipzener have taken over. 8/15
GMSAX Goldman Sachs Managed Futures Strategy Fund Alex Wang will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. James Park and William Fallon will continue on 8/15
GCMAX Goldman Sachs Mid Cap Value Portfolio Dolores Bamford announced that she will be retiring from Goldman Sachs, effective September 1st. Sung Cho joins Timothy Ryan and Sean Gallagher in managing the fund 8/15
HERAX Hartford Emerging Markets Equity Fund Cheryl Duckworth is no longer listed as a portfolio manager David Elliot has taken over as portfolio manager 8/15
HRLAX Hartford Global Real Asset Fund Lindsay Politi will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Jay Bhutani, Scott Elliott, Brian Garvey, and David Chang will continue managing the fund 8/15
HIPAX Hartford Inflation Plus Fund Lindsay Politi will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Joseph Marvan will take over as sole manager to the fund 8/15
HDVAX Hartford International Capital Appreciation Fund Jean-Marc Berteaux, James Shakin, and Tara Connolly Stilwell will no longer serve as a portfolio managers for the fund. Kent Stahl and Gregg Thomas remain. 8/15
HNCAX Hartford International Growth Fund. Jean-Marc Berteaux will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Tara Connolly Stilwell has joined John Boselli in managing the fund. 8/15
HAFAX Hartford Multi-Asset Income Fund No one, but . . . David Elliot, Campe Goodman, and Richard Meagher have been joined by Lutz-Peter Wilke 8/15
HTNAX Hartford Municipal Real Return Fund Lindsay Politi will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Timothy Haney and Brad Libby will be joined by Joseph Marvan 8/15
HRTVX Heartland Value Fund Bradford Evans has stepped down as a portfolio manager Adam Peck joins William Nasgovitz to manage the fund 8/15
IMIFX Innovator McKinley Income Fund Steven Carhart is no longer listed as a manager to the fund Robert A. Gillam, Robert B. Gillam, Sheldon Lien, Brandon Rinner, and Gregory Samorajski will now run the fund 8/15
JEVAX John Hancock Funds Emerging Markets Fund Henry Gray and Karen Umland are no longer listed as a portfolio managers on the fund. Joseph Chi, Jed Fogdall, and Allen Pu will continue on. 8/15
GIDEX John Hancock International Core Fund Thomas R. Hancock, Ph.D. will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. David Cowan, Ben Inker, and Sam Wilderman will continue as portfolio managers of the fund. They will be joined by Neil Constable and Chris Fortson. 8/15
JISAX John Hancock International Small Company Fund No one, but . . . Arun Keswani and Bhanu Singh have joined Joseph Chi, Jed Fogdall, Henry Gray, and Karen Umland as portfolio managers of the fund 8/15
JASOX John Hancock New Opportunities Fund Bhanu Singh will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Joel Schnieder has joined Joseph Chi, Jed Fogdall and Henry Gray as a portfolio manager of the fund 8/15
JHUAX John Hancock U.S. Equity Fund Thomas Hancock, Ph.D. will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. David Cowan, Ben Inker, and Sam Wilderman will continue as managers of the fund 8/15
JHUAX John Hancock U.S. Equity Fund Thomas R. Hancock, Ph.D. will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. David Cowan, Ben Inker, and Sam Wilderman will continue as portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
IJEAX JPMorgan Emerging Markets Equity Fund Richard Titherington is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Austin Forey, Leon Eidelman, and Amit Mehta will continue on. 8/15
JEMEX JPMorgan Emerging Markets Equity Income Fund Richard Titherington is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Omar Negyal is now the sole portfolio manager on the fund 8/15
MNILX Litman Gregory Masters International Fund Wellington Management Company LLP will be removed as a sub-advisor and Jean-Marc Berteaux will be removed as the portfolio manager. That’s a rare rebuke for Wellington. The other four sets of sub-advisers remain. 8/15
NWUAX Nationwide U.S. Small Cap Value Fund Bhanu Singh will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Joel Schnieder has joined Joseph Chi, Jed Fogdall and Henry Gray as a portfolio manager of the fund 8/15
NSIAX Nuveen Symphony International Equity Fund Joel Drescher is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Marc Snyder joins Ross Sakamoto and Gunther Stein in managing the fund 8/15
NCGAX Nuveen Symphony Large-Cap Growth Fund Joel Drescher is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Marc Snyder joins Ross Sakamoto and Gunther Stein in managing the fund 8/15
NCCAX Nuveen Symphony Mid-Cap Core Fund Joel Drescher is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Marc Snyder joins Ross Sakamoto and Gunther Stein in managing the fund 8/15
OOSAX Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund Effective October 28, 2015, Margaret Hui will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. On that date, David Lukkes will join existing manager Joseph Welsh 8/15
PRDAX Principal Diversified Real Asset James Fennessey is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Benjamin Rotenberg, Marcus Dummer, Jessica Bush, Jake Anonson, and Kelly Grossman will continue to manage the fund. 8/15
PMSAX Principal Global Multi-Strategy James Fennessey is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Benjamin Rotenberg, Marcus Dummer, Jessica Bush, Jake Anonson, and Kelly Grossman will continue to manage the fund. 8/15
RAMVX Roumell Opportunistic Value Fund Edward Crawford is no longer a portfolio manager to the fund JamesRoumell, lead portfolio manager, will continue to provide services to the fund. 8/15
SSCPX Saratoga Small Capitalization Fund Patrick O’Brien is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Mitch Zacks is the new portfolio manager 8/15
SMENX Schroder Emerging Markets Multi-Cap Equity Fund Daniel Winterbottom will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Ayse Serinturk, James Larkman, Stephen Langford, and Justin Abercrombie will remain with the fund. 8/15
SRLN SPDR Blackstone / GSO Senior Loan ETF Lee Shaiman will retire by the end of September. Daniel McMullen will assume the portfolio manager role. 8/15
FUSIX Strategic Advisers® International II Fund H.B. King is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Wilfred Chilangwa and Cesar Hernandez will continue to manage the fund 8/15
TVRAX Transparent Value Directional Allocation Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVEAX Transparent Value Dividend Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVAAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Aggressive Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVBAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Core Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVDAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Defensive Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVGAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Growth Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVMAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Market Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVVAX Transparent Value Large-Cap Value Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVSAX Transparent Value Small-Cap Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
TVKAX Transparent Value SMID-Cap Directional Allocation Fund Julian Koski will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. Scott Hammond, Armen Arus and Gennadiy Khayutin will remain as the portfolio managers of the fund. 8/15
USIFX USAA International Fund No one, but . . . The fund’s Board of Trustees recently approved Lazard Asset Management and Wellington Management LLP as two additional subadvisers to the fund 8/15
VAIAX Virtus Alternative Income Solution Fund Joe Lu will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. The rest of the extensive team remains. 8/15
VATAX Virtus Alternative Total Solution Fund Joe Lu will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for the fund. The rest of the extensive team remains. 8/15
Various Voya Solution, Retirement Solution and Index Solution funds Frank van Etten will no longer serve as a portfolio manager for about 20 funds. The other managers remain. 8/15
WHGMX Westwood Smidcap Fund Ragen Stienk is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Susan Schmidt joins Prashant Inamdar, Thomas Lieu, and Grant Taber in running the fund. 8/15
WHGPX Westwood Smidcap Plus Fund Ragen Stienk is no longer listed as a portfolio manager on the fund. Susan Schmidt joins Prashant Inamdar, Thomas Lieu, and Grant Taber in running the fund. 8/15

 

Checking in on MFO’s 20-year Great Owls

By Charles Boccadoro

Originally published in September 1, 2015 Commentary

MFO first introduced its rating system in the June 2013 commentary. That’s also when the first “Great Owl” funds were designated. These funds have consistently delivered top quintile risk adjusted returns (based on Martin Ratio) in their categories for evaluation periods 3 years and longer. The most senior are 20-year Great Owls. These select funds have received Return Group ranking of 5 for evaluation periods of 3, 5, 10, and 20 years. Only about 50 funds of the 1500 mutual funds aged 20 years or older, or about 3%, achieve the GO designation. An impressive accomplishment.

Below are the current 20-year GOs (excluding muni funds for compactness, but find complete list here, also reference MFO Ratings Definitions.)

GO_1GO_2GO_3GO_4

Of the original 20-year GO list of 47 funds still in existence today, only 19 remain GOs. These include notables: Fidelity GNMA (FGMNX), PIMCO Foreign Bond – USD-Hedged I (PFORX), James Balanced: Golden Rainbow R (GLRBX), T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation (PRWCX), Vanguard Wellington Inv (VWELX), Meridian Growth Legacy (MERDX), and Hennessy Gas Utility Investor (GASFX).

The current 20-year GOs also include 25 Honor Roll funds, based on legacy Fund Alarm ranking system. Honor Roll funds have delivered top quintile absolute returns in its category for evaluation periods of 1, 3, and 5 years. These include: AMG Managers Interm Dur Govt (MGIDX), PIMCO Foreign Bond – USD-Hedged I (PFORX), James Balanced: Golden Rainbow R (GLRBX), T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation (PRWCX), and T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth (RPMGX).

A closer look at performance of the original list of 20-year GOs, since they were introduced a little more than two years ago, shows very satisfactory performance overall, even with funds not maintaining GO designation. Below is a summary of Return Group rankings and current three-year performance.
OGO_1OGO_2OGO_3OGO_4
Of the 31 funds in tables above, only 7 have underperformed on a risk adjusted basis during the past three years, while 22 have outperformed.

Some notable outperformers include: Vanguard Wellesley Income Inv (VWINX), Oakmark International I (OAKIX), Sequoia (SEQUX), Brown Capital Mgmt Small Co Inv (BCSIX), and T. Rowe Price New Horizons (PRNHX).

And the underperformers? Waddell & Reed Continental Inc A (UNCIX), AMG Yacktman (YACKX), Gabelli Equity Income AAA (GABEX), and Voya Corporate Leaders Trust (LEXCX).

A look at absolute returns show that 10 of the 31 underperformed their peers by an average of 1.6% annualized return, while the remaining 21 beat their peers by an average of 4.8%.

Gentle reminder: MFO ratings are strictly quantitative and backward looking. No accounting for manager or adviser changes, survivorship bias, category drift, etc.

Will take a closer look at the three-year mark and make habit of posting how they fared over time.

We Are Where We Are, Or, If The Dog Didn’t Stop To Crap, He Would Have Caught The Rabbit

By Edward A. Studzinski

“I prefer the company of peasants because they have not been educated sufficiently to reason incorrectly.”

               Michel de Montaigne

At this point in time, rather than focus on the “if only” questions that tend to freeze people in their tracks in these periods of market volatility, I think we should consider what is important. For most of us, indeed, the vast majority of us, the world did not end in August and it is unlikely to end in September.  Indeed, for most Americans and therefore by definition most of us, the vagaries of the stock market are not that important.

What then is important? A Chicago Tribune columnist, Mary Schmich, recently interviewed Edward Stuart, an economics professor at Northeastern Illinois University as a follow-up to his appearance on a panel on Chicago Public Television’s “Chicago Tonight” show. Stuart had pointed out that the ownership of stock (and by implication, mutual funds) in the United States is quite unequal. He noted that while the stock market has done very well in recent years, the standard of living of the average American citizen has not done as well. Stuart thinks that the real median income for a household size of four is about $40,000 …. and that number has not changed since the late 70’s. My spin on this is rather simple – the move up the economic ladder that we used to see for various demographic groups – has stopped.

If you think about it, the evidence is before us. How many of us have friends whose children went to college, got their degrees, and returned home to live with their parents while they hunted for a job in their chosen field, which they often could not find? When one drives around city and suburban streets, how many vacancies do we see in commercial properties?  How many middle class families that used to bootstrap themselves up by investing in and owning apartment buildings or strip malls don’t now?  What is needed is a growing economy that offers real job prospects that pay real wages. Stuart also pointed out that student debt is one of the few kinds of debt that one cannot expunge with bankruptcy.

As I read that piece of Ms. Schmick’s and reflected on it, I was reminded of another column I had read a few months back that talked about where we had gone off the rails collectively. The piece was entitled “Battle for the Boardroom” by Joe Nocera and was in the NY Times on May 9, 2015. Nocera was discussing the concept of “activist investors” and “shareholder value” specifically as it pertained to Nelson Peltz, Trian Investments, and a proxy fight with the management and board of DuPont.  And Nocera pointed out that Trian, by all accounts, had a good record and was often a constructive force once it got a board seat or two.

Nocera’s concern, which he raised in a fashion that went straight for the jugular, was simple. Have we really reached the point where the activist investor gets to call the tune, no matter how well run the company? What is shareholder value, especially in a company like DuPont? Trian’s argument was that DuPont was not getting a return on its spending on research and development? Yet R&D spending is what made DuPont, given the years it takes to often produce from scientific research a commercial product. Take away the R&D spending argued Nocera, and you have not just a poorer DuPont, but also a poorer United States. He closed by talking with and quoting Martin Lipton, a corporate attorney who has made a career out of disparaging corporate activists. Lipton said, “Activism has caused companies to cut R&D, capital investment, and, most significantly, employment,” he said. “It forces companies to lay off employees to meet quarterly earnings.”

“It is,” he concluded, “a disaster for the country.”

This brings me to my final set of ruminations. Some years ago, my wife and I were guests at a small dinner party at the home of a former ambassador (and patriot) living in Santa Fe.  There were a total of six of us at that dinner. One of the other guests raised the question as to whether any of us ever thought about what things would have been like for the country if Al Gore, rather than George W. Bush, had won the presidential election. My immediate response was that I didn’t think about such things as it was just far too painful to contemplate.

In like vein, having recently read Ron Suskind’s book Confidence Men, I have been forced to contemplate what it would have meant for the country if President-elect Barack Obama had actually followed through with the recommendations of his transition advisors and appointed his “A” Economic Team. Think about it – Paul Volcker as Secretary of the Treasury, the resurrection of Glass-Steagall, the break-up of the big investment banks – it too is just too painful to contemplate.  Or as the line from T.H. White’s Once and Future King goes, “I dream things that never were, and ask why not?”

Now, a few thoughts about the carnage and how to deal with it.  Have a plan and stick to it. Do not panic, for inevitably all panic does is lead to self-inflicted wounds. Think about fees, but from the perspective of correlated investments. That is, if five large (over $10B in assets) balanced funds are all positively correlated in terms of their portfolios, does it really make sense not to own the one with the lowest expense ratio (and depending on where it is held, taxes may come into play)? Think about doing things where other people’s panic does not impact you, e.g., is there a place for closed end funds in a long-term investment portfolio? And avoid investments where the bugs have not been worked out, as the glitches in pricing and execution of trades for ETF’s have shown us over the last few weeks.

There is a wonderful Dilbert cartoon where the CEO says “Asok, you can beat market averages by doing your own stock research. Asok then says, “So … You believe every investor can beat the average by reading the same information? “Yes” says the CEO. Asok then says, “Makes you wonder why more people don’t do it.” The CEO closes saying, “Just lazy, I guess.”

Edward A. Studzinski

August 1, 2015

By David Snowball

Dear friends,

Welcome to the dog days.

“Dog days” didn’t originally have anything to do with dogs, of course. It derived from the ancient belief shared by Egyptians, Greeks and Romans that summer weather was controlled by Sirius, the Dog Star. Why? Because Sirius rises just at dawn in the hottest, most sultry months of the year.

tired-labrador-4-1347255-639x423

FreeImages.com/superburg

In celebration of the fact that the dog days of summer have arrived and you should be out by the pool with family, we’re opening our annual summer-weight issue with some good news.

MFO is a charity case

And you just thought we were a basket case!

As a matter of economic and administrative necessity, the Observer has always been organized as a sole proprietorship. We’re pleased to announce that, in June, our legal status changed. On June 29, we became a non-profit corporation (Mutual Fund Observer, Inc.) under Iowa law. On July 6, the Internal Revenue Service “determined that [we’re] exempt from federal income tax under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3).”

Why does that matter?

  1. It means that all contributions to the Observer are now tax-deductible. We’ve always taken a moment to send hand-written thanks to folks for their support; going forward, we’ll include a card for their tax records.
  2. It means that any contribution made on or after May 27, 2015 is retroactively tax deductible. After this issue is live and we’ve handled the monthly cleanup chores, we’ll begin sending the appropriate documents to the folks involved.
  3. It means we’re finding ways to become a long-term source of commentary and analysis.

It’s no secret that the Observer’s annual operating budget is roughly equivalent to what some … hmmmm, larger entities in the field spend on paperclips. That works as long as highly talented individuals work pro bono (technically pro bono publico, literally, “for the public good”). As we turn more frequently to outsiders, whether for access to fund data or programming services, we’ll need to strengthen our finances. These changes are part of that effort.

Other changes in the media environment lead us to conclude that there’s an increasingly important role for an independent, authoritative public voice speaking for (and to) smaller investors and smaller fund firms. At the June Morningstar conference, there was quiet, nervous conversation about the prospect that The Wall Street Journal staff had been forced to re-apply for their own jobs. The editors of the Journal announced, in June, a plan to reduce personal finance coverage in the paper:

We will be scaling back significantly our personal finance team, though we will continue to provide high quality reporting and commentary on topics of personal financial interest to our readers.

These closures and realignments do not reflect on the quality of the work done by these teams but simply speak to the pressing need to become more focused as a newsroom on areas we believe are ripe for growth.

We will be better-equipped and better able to exploit the opportunities that exist in the fastest growing parts of our business: with enhanced and improved coverage of the news that we know translates into additional circulation and long-term growth. 

Details of the restructuring emerged in July. At base, resources are being moved from serving individual investors to serving financial advisors. While that’s good for the Journal’s profits and might be good for the 300,000 or so financial advisers in the country (a number that’s dropping steadily), it represents a further shift from serious service to the rest of us. (Thanks to Ari Weinberg for leading us to good coverage of these changes.)

Being a non-profit makes sense for us. It allows us to maintain our independence and focus (a nonprofit corporation is legally owned by all the people of a state and chartered to serve the public interest).

The Observer has always tried to act responsibly and our new legal status reflects that commitment. In addition to that whole “giving voice to the voiceless” thing, we consciously try to act as good stewards. By way of examples:

carbonWe work hard to minimize the stress we place on the planet and its systems. We travel very little and, when we do, we purchase carbon offsets through Carbonfund. Carbonfund allows individuals or businesses to calculate the amount of carbon released by their activities and to offset them with investments in a variety of climate-friendly projects from building renewable power systems to recapturing the methane produced in landfills and helping farmers control the effects of animal containment facilities. They’re a non-profit, seem to generate consistently high ratings from folks who assess their operations and write sensibly. In general, we tend to be carbon-negative.

greenThe Observer is hosted by GreenGeeks. They host over 300,000 sites and are distinguished for the environmental commitment. They promise “if we pull 1X of power from the grid we purchase enough wind energy credits to put back into the grid 3X of power having been produced by wind power. Your website hosted with GreenGeeks will be powered by 300% wind energy, making your website’s carbon footprint negative.”

river bend foodbankWe think of food banks as something folks need mid-winter, which misses the fact that many children receive their only hot meal of the day (sometimes, only meal of the day) as part of their school’s breakfast and lunch programs. That’s led some charities to characterize summer as “the hungriest time of the year” for children. There’s a really worthy federal summer meals program, but it only reaches 15% of the kids who are fed during the regular school year.

We use the same approach here as we do in investing: make a commitment and automate it. On the last day of every month, there’s an automatic transfer from our checking to the River Bend FoodBank. It’s a good group that spends under 3% on administration. Our contribution is not major – enough to provide 150 meals for hungry families – but it’s the sort of absolutely steady inflow that allows an organization to help folks and do a meaningful planning.

All of which is, by the way, exciting and terrifying.

If you’d like to support the Mutual Fund Observer, you have two options:

  1. To make a tax deductible contribution, please use our PayPal button on the right, or visit our Support Us page for our address to mail a check. You’ll receive a thank you with a receipt for your tax records.
  2. We also strongly encourage everyone who shops at Amazon, now America’s largest retailer (take that Walmart!), to bookmark our Amazon link. Every time you buy anything at Amazon, using our link, we get a small percentage of the sale, and it costs you nothing.

Finding a family’s first fund

I suspect that very few of our readers need advice on selecting a “first fund.” But I’m very certain that you know people who are, or should be, starting their first investment account. Our faithful research associate David Welsch is starting down that road: first “real” job, the prospect of his first modest apartment and the need for starting to put money aside. The contractor who did a splendid job rebuilding my rotted deck admitted that up until now he’s had to spend everything he’s made to support his family and company, but now is in a place to start (just start) thinking about the future. A friend had a passing conversation with a grocery cashier (we’re in the Midwest, this sort of stuff happens a lot) who was saddened by an elderly friend struggling with money in his 70s; my friend suggested that the young lady ought to begin a small account for her own sake. “I know,” she sighed, “I knooow.” For the young men and women serving in the armed forces and making $20,000-30,000 a year, the challenge is just as great.

Mostly they think it’s hard, don’t know where to start, don’t know who to ask and can’t imagine it will make a difference. And you’re feeling a bit guilty because you haven’t been as much help as you’d like.

Here’s what to do. Read the article below. Print it out (we’ve even created a nice .pdf of it for you). Hand it to a young friend with the simple promise, “this will make it easy to get started.”

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“The journey of a thousand miles begins …

journey

with one step.” Lao-Tzu.

Good news: you’re ready to take that step and we’re here to help make it happen. We’re going to guide you through the process of setting up your first investment account. There are only two things you need to know:

It’s easy and

It will make a big difference. You’ll be glad you did it.

easyIt’s easy. A mutual fund is simply a way of sharing with others in the costs of hiring a professional to make investments on your behalf. Mostly your manager will invest in either stocks or bonds. Stocks give you part-ownership in a company (Apple, Google, Ford); if the value of the company rises, the value of your shares will rise too. Some companies will soar; others will crash so it’s wiser for investors to invest broadly in a bunch of companies than to try to find individual winners. Bonds are ways for governments or companies to borrow money and pay it back, with interest, over time. “Iffy” borrowers have to pay a bit more in interest, so you earn a bit more on loans to them; high quality borrowers pay you a bit less but you can be pretty sure that they’ll repay their borrowings promptly and fully.

Over very long periods, stocks make more money than bonds but, over shorter periods, stocks can lose a lot more money than bonds.  Your best path is to own some of each, rather than betting entirely on one or the other. If you look back over the last 65 years, you can see the pattern: stocks provide the most long-term gain but also the greatest short-term pain.

Average performance, 1949-2013 80% stocks / 20% bonds & cash 60% stocks / 40% bonds & cash 40% stocks / 60% bonds & cash
Average annual gain 10.5% 9.3 8.1
How often did it lose money? 14 times 12 times 11 times
How much did it lose in bad years? 8.8% 6.4% 3.0%
How much did it lose in its worst year? 28.7% 20.4% 11.5%

How do you read the table? As you double your exposure to stocks, going from 40% to 80%, you add 2.4% to your average annual return. That’s good, though the gain is not huge. At the same time, you increase by 30% the chance of finishing a year in the red and you triple the size of the loss you might expect.  

We searched through about 7000 mutual funds on your behalf, looking for really good first funds. We looked for four virtues:

  • They can handle stormy weather. All investments rise and fall; we found ones that won’t fall far and long.
  • They can handle sunny weather. Over time, things get better. The world’s economy grows, people have better lives and the world’s a richer place. We found funds that earned good returns over time so you could benefit from that growth.
  • They don’t overcharge you. Your mutual fund is a business with bills to pay; as a shareholder in the fund you help pay those bills. Paying under 1% a year is reasonable. While 1% doesn’t seem like a lot, if your fund only makes 6% gains, you’d be returning 17% of those profits to the manager.
  • They require only a small investment to get started. As low as $50 a month seemed within reach of folks who were determined to get started.

Getting the account set up requires about 20 minutes, a two page form and knowing your checking account numbers.

It will make a difference. How much can $50 a month get you? In one year, not so much. Over time, a surprising lot. Here’s how much your account might grow using three pretty conservative rates of return (5-7% per year) and four holding periods.

  5% 6% 7%
One year $ 667 670 673
Ten years 7,850 8,284 8,750
Twenty years 20,700 23,268 26,250
Forty years 76,670 100,120  $ 132,100

You read that correctly: if you’re a young investor able to put $50 a month away between now and retirement, just that contribution might translate to $100,000 or more.

Two things to remember: (1) Patience is your ally. Markets can be scary; sometimes they’re going down and you think they’ll never go up again. But they do. Always have. Here’s how to win: set up your account with a small automatic monthly investment, check in on it every year or so, add a bit more as your finances improve and go enjoy your life. (2) Small things add up over time. In the example above, if your fund pays you just 1% more it makes a 30% difference in how much you’ll have over the long term. Buying a fund with low expenses can make that 1% difference all by itself, and so can a small increase in the percentage of your account invested in stocks.

Three funds to consider. The August 2015 issue of Mutual Fund Observer, available free on-line, provides a more complete discussion of each of these funds. In addition to our own explanation of them, we’ve provided links to the form you’d need to complete to open an account, the most recent fact sheet provided by the fund company (it’s a two page “highlights of our fund” document) and a link to the fund’s homepage.

jamesJames Balanced: Golden Rainbow (ticker symbol: GLRBX). The fund invests about half of its money in stocks and half in bonds, though the managers have the ability to become much more cautious or much more daring if the situation calls for it. Mostly they’ve been cautious, successful investors; they’ve made about 6.9% per year over the past decade, with less risk than their peers. During the very bad period in 2008, the stock market fell about 40% while Golden Rainbow lost less than 6%. The fund’s operating expenses average 1.01% per year, which is low. Starting an account requires a monthly investment of $500 or a one-time investment of $2,000.

Why consider it? Very low starting investment, very cautious managers, very solid returns.

Profile Fact Sheet Application

tiaa-crefTIAA-CREF Lifestyle Conservative (TSCLX). TIAA-CREF’s traditional business has been providing low cost, conservatively managed investment accounts for people working at hospitals, universities and other non-profit organizations.  Today they manage about $630 billion for investors. The Lifestyle Conservative Fund invests about 40% of its money in stocks and 60% in bonds. It does that by investing in other TIAA-CREF mutual funds that specialize in different parts of the stock or bond market. This fund has only been around for four years but most of the funds in which it invests have long, solid records. The fund’s operating expenses average 0.87% per year, well below average. Starting an account requires a monthly investment of $100 or a one-time investment of $2,500.

Why consider it? The most conservative stock-bond mix in the group, solid lineup of funds it invests in, low expenses and a rock-solid advisor.

Profile Fact Sheet Application

vanguardVanguard STAR (VGSTX). Vanguard has a unique corporate structure; it’s owned by the shareholders in its funds. As a result, it has been famous for keeping its expenses amazingly low and its standards consistently high. They now manage over $3 trillion, which represents a powerful vote of confidence on the part of millions of investors. STAR is designed to be Vanguard’s first fund for beginning investors. STAR invests about 60% of its money in stocks and 40% in bonds. It does that by investing in other Vanguard funds. Over the past 10 years, it has earned about 6.8% per year and it lost 25% in 2008. The fund’s operating expenses are 0.34% per year, which is very low. Starting an account requires a one-time investment of $1,000.

Why consider it? The lowest expenses in the group, one-stop access to many of the best funds offered by the firm many consider the best in the world.

Profile Fact Sheet Application

We’re targeting funds for you whose portfolios are somewhere around 40-60% stocks. Why so cautious? You might be thinking, “hey, these are Old People funds! I’m young. I’ve got time.  I want to invest in stocks, exciting 3D printing stocks!” Owning too many stocks is bad for your financial health. Imagine that you were really good, invested steadily and built a $10,000 portfolio. How would you feel if someone broke in, stole $5,000 from it and the police said that they thought it might take five to ten years to solve the crime and get your money back? In the meantime, you were out of luck. That’s essentially what happens from time to time in the stock market and it’s really discouraging. Those 3D printing stocks that seem so exciting? They’ve lost two-thirds of their value in the past year, many will never recover.

If you balance your portfolio, you get much better odds of success. Remember Table One, which gives you the tradeoff?  Balancing gives you a really good bargain, especially for the first step in your journey.

So what’s the next step? It’s easy. Pick the one that makes the most sense to you. Take 20 minutes to fill out a short account set-up form online. Tell them if you want to start by investing a little money or a lot. Fill it out, choose the option that says “reinvest my gains, please!” and go back to doing the stuff you really enjoy.

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Two bits of follow-up for our regular readers. You might ask, why didn’t we tell folks to start with a six-month emergency fund? Two reasons. First, they are many good personal finance steps folks need to take: build a savings account, avoid eating out frequently, pay down high interest rate credit card debt and all. Since we’re not personal finance specialists, we decided to start where we could add value. Second, a conservative fund can act as a supplement to a savings account; if you’ve got a conservative $5,000 that will still hold $4,000-4,500 at the trough of a bear does provide emergency backup. In my own portfolio, I use T. Rowe Price Spectrum Income (RPSIX) and RiverPark Short-Term High Yield (RPHYX, closed) as my cash-management accounts. Both can lose money but both thump CDs and other “safe” choices most years while posting manageable losses in the worst of times.

Second, there may be other funds out there which would fit our parameters and provide a more-attractive profile than one of the three we’ve highlighted. If so, let us know at david@mutualfundobserver.com! I’d love to follow-up next month with suggestions for other ways to help young folks who have neither the confidence nor the awareness to seek out a fully qualified financial advisor. One odd side-note: there are several “Retirement Income” funds with really good profiles; I didn’t mention them because I figured that 99% of young folks would reject them just for the name alone.

Where else might small investors turn for a second or third fund?

Once upon a time, the fund industry had faith in the discipline of average investors so they offered lots of funds with minuscule initial investments. The hope was that folks would develop the discipline of investing regularly on their own.

Oops. Not even I can manage that feat. As the industry quickly and painfully learned, if it’s not on auto-pilot, it’s not getting funded.

That’s a real loss, even if a self-inflicted one, for small investors.  Nonetheless, there remain about 130 funds accessible to folks with modest budgets and the willingness to make a serious commitment to improving their finances.  By my best reading, there are thirteen smaller fund families still taking the risk of getting stiffed by undisciplined investors.  The families willing to waive their normal investment minimums are:

Family AIP minimum Notes
Ariel $50 Four value-oriented, low turnover funds , one international fund and one global fund
Artisan $50 Fifteen uniformly great, risk-conscious equity funds, with eight still open to new investors.  Artisan tends to close their funds early and a number are currently shuttered.
Aston  funds $50 Aston has 27 funds covering both portfolio cores and a bunch of interesting niches.  They adopted some venerable older funds and hired institutional managers to sub-advise the others.
Azzad $50 Two socially-responsible funds, one midcap and one (newer) small cap. The Azzad Ethical Fund maintains a $50 minimum for AIPs, while the minimum for the Azzad Wise Capital Fund is now $300.
Gabelli/GAMCO $100 On AAA shares, anyway.  Gabelli’s famous, he knows it and he overcharges.  That said, these are really solid funds.
Homestead $0 Eight funds (stock, bond, international), solid to really good performance, very fair expenses.
Icon $100 18 funds whose “I” or “S” class shares are no-load.  These are sector or sector-rotation funds.
James $50 Four very solid funds, the most notable of which is James Balanced: Golden Rainbow (GLRBX), a quant-driven fund that keeps a smallish slice in stocks
Manning & Napier $25 The best fund company that you’ve never heard of.  Fourteen diverse funds, all managed by the same team. Pro-Blend Conservative (EXDAX) probably warrants a spot on the “first fund” list.
Parnassus $50 Six socially-responsible funds, all currently earn four or five stars from Morningstar. I’m particularly intrigued by Parnassus Endeavor (PARWX) which likes to invest in firms that treat their staff decently. You will need a $500 initial investment to open your account.
USAA $50 USAA primarily provides financial services for members of the U.S. military and their families.  Their funds are available to anyone but you need to join USAA (it’s free) in order to learn anything about them.  That said, 26 funds, so quite good.

Potpourri

edward, ex cathedraby Edward A. Studzinski

Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

       Joseph Heller

We are now at the seven month mark. All would not appear to be well in the investing world. But before I head off on that tangent, there are some housekeeping matters to address.

First, at the beginning of the year I suggested that the average family unit should own no more than ten mutual funds, which would cover both individual and retirement assets. When my long-suffering spouse read that, the question she asked was how many we had. I stopped counting when I got to twenty-five, and told her the results of my search. I was then told that if I was going to tell others they should have ten or less per family unit, we should follow suit. I am happy to report that the number is now down to seventeen (exclusive of money market funds), and I am aiming to hit that ten number by year-end.

Obviously, tax consequences play a big role in this process of consolidation. One, there are tax consequences you can control, in terms of whether your ownership is long-term or short-term, and when to sell. Two, there are tax consequences you can’t control, which are tied in an actively-managed fund, to the decision by the portfolio manager to take some gains and losses in an effort to manage the fund in a tax-efficient manner. At least that is what I hope they are doing. There are other tax consequences you cannot control when the fund in question’s performance is bad, leading to a wave of redemptions. The wave of redemptions then leads to forced selling of equity positions, either en masse or on a pro rata basis, which then triggers tax issues (hopefully gains but sometimes not). The problem with these unintended or unplanned for tax consequences, is that in non-retirement accounts, you are often faced with a tax bill that you have not planned for at filing time, and need to come up with a check to pay the taxes due. A very different way to control the tax consequences, especially if you are of a certain age, is to own passive index funds, whose portfolios won’t change except for those issues going into or leaving the index. Turnover and hence capital gains distributions, tend to be minimized. And since they do tend to own everything as it were, you will pick up some of the benefit of merger and acquisition activity. However, index funds are not immune to an investor panic, which leads to forced selling which again triggers tax consequences.

In this consolidation process, one of the issues I am wrestling with is what to do with money market funds, given that later this year unless something changes again, they will be allowed to “break the buck” or no longer have a constant $1 share price. My inclination is to say that cash reserves for individuals should go back into bank certificates of deposit, up to the maximum amounts of the FDIC insurance. That will work until or unless, like Europe, the government through the banks decides to start charging a negative interest rate on bank deposits. The other issue I am wrestling with is the category of balanced funds, where I am increasingly concerned that the three usual asset classes of equities, fixed income, and cash, will not necessarily work in a complementary manner to reduce risk. The counter argument to that of course, is that most people investing in a balanced (or equity fund for that matter) investment, do not have a sufficiently long time horizon, ten years perhaps being the minimum commitment. If you look at recent history, it is extraordinary how many ten year returns both for equity funds and balanced funds, tend to cluster around the 8% annualized mark.

Morningstar, revisited:

One of the more interesting lunch meetings I had around the Morningstar conference that I did not attend, was with a Seattle-based father-son team with an outstanding record to date in their fund. One of the major research tools used was, shock of shock, the Value Line. But that should not surprise people. Many of Buffet’s own personal investments were, as he relates it, arrived at by thumbing through things like a handbook of Korean stocks. I have used a similar handbook to look at Japanese stocks. One needs to understand that in many respects, the purpose of hordes of analysts, producing detailed models and exhaustive reports is to provide the cover of the appearance of adequate due diligence. Years ago, when I was back in the trust investment world, I used to have various services for sale by the big trust banks (think New York and Philadelphia) presented to me as necessary. Not necessary to arrive at good investment decisions, but necessary to have as file drawer stuffers when the regulators came to examine why a particular equity issue had been added to the approved list. Now of course with Regulation FD, rather than individual access to managements and the danger of selective disclosure of material information, we have big and medium sized companies putting on analyst days, where all investors – buy side, sell side, and retail, get access to the same information at the same time, and what they make of it is up to them.

So how does one improve the decision making process, or rather, get an investment edge? The answer is, it depends on the industry and what you are defining as your circle of competency. Let’s assume for the moment it is property and casualty reinsurance. I would submit that one would want to make a point of attending the industry meetings, held annually, in Monte Carlo and Baden-Baden. If you have even the most rudimentary of social skills, you will come away from those events with a good idea as to how pricing (rate on line) is going to be set for categories of business and renewals. You will get an idea as to whose underwriting is conservative and whose is not. And you will get an idea as to who is under-reserved for prior events and who is not. You will also get a sense as to how a particular executive is perceived.

Is this the basis for an investment decision alone? No, but in the insurance business, which is a business of estimates to begin with, the two most critical variables are the intelligence and integrity of management (which comes down from the top). What about those wonderfully complex models, forecasting interest rates, pricing, catastrophic events leading to loss ratios and the like? It strikes me that fewer and fewer people have taken sciences in high school or college, where they have learned about the Law of Significant Numbers. Or put another way, perhaps appropriately cynical, garbage in/garbage out.

Now, many of you are sitting there thinking that it really cannot be this simple. And I will tell you that the finest investment analyst I have ever met, a contemporary of mine, when he was acting as an analyst, used to do up his research ideas by hand, on one or one and a half sheets of 8 ½ by 11 paper.

There would be a one or two sentence description of the company and lines of business, a simple income statement going out maybe two years beyond this year, several bullet points as to what the investment case was, with what could go right (and sometimes what could go wrong), and that was generally it, except for perhaps a concluding “Reasons to Own. AND HIS RETURNS WERE SPECTACULAR FOR HIS IDEAS! People often disbelieve me when I tell them that, so luckily I have saved one of those write-ups. My point is this – the best ideas are often the simplest ideas, capable of being presented and explained in one or two declarative sentences.

What’s coming?

Do not put at risk more than you can afford to lose without impacting your standard of living

And finally, for a drop of my usual enthusiasm for the glass half empty. There is a lot of strange stuff going on in the world at the moment, much of it not going according to plan, for governments, central banks, and corporations as one expected in January. Commodity prices are collapsing. Interest rates look to go up in this country, perhaps sooner rather than later. China may or may not have lost control of its markets, which would not augur well for the rest of us. I will leave you with something else to ponder. The “dot.com” crash in 2000 and the financial crisis of 2007-2008-2009 were water-torture events. Most of the people running money now were around for them, and it represents their experiential reference point. The October 1987 crash was a very different animal – you came in one day, and things just headed down and did not stop. Derivatives did not work, portfolio insurance did not work, and there was no liquidity as everyone panicked and tried to go through the door at once. Very few people who went through that experience are still actively running money. I bring this up, because I worry that the next event (and there will be one), will not necessarily be like the last two, where one had time to get out in orderly fashion. That is why I keep emphasizing – do not put at risk more than you can afford to lose without impacting your standard of living. Investors, whether professional or individual, need to guard mentally against always being prepared to fight the last war.

Top developments in fund industry litigation

fundfoxFundfox, launched in 2012, is the mutual fund industry’s only litigation intelligence service, delivering exclusive litigation information and real-time case documents neatly organized, searchable, and filtered as never before. For the complete list of developments last month, and for information and court documents in any case, log in at www.fundfox.com and navigate to Fundfox Insider.

New Lawsuit

  • A new excessive-fee lawsuit targets five State Farm LifePath target-date funds. Complaint: “The nature and quality of Defendant’s services to the LifePath Funds in exchange for close to half of the net management fee are extremely limited. Indeed, it is difficult to determine what management services, if any, [State Farm] provides to the LifePath Funds, since virtually all of the investment management functions of the LifePath Funds are delegated” to an unaffiliated sub-adviser. (Ingenhutt v. State Farm Inv. Mgmt. Corp.)

Orders

  • A court gave its final approval to the $27.5 million settlement of an ERISA class action that had challenged the selection of proprietary Columbia and RiverSource funds for Ameriprise retirement accounts. (Krueger v. Ameriprise Fin., Inc.)
  • In a decision on motion to dismiss, a court allowed a plaintiff to add new Morgan Keegan defendants to previously allowed Securities Act claims regarding four closed-end funds, rejecting the new defendants’ statute-of-limitations argument. (Small v. RMK High Income Fund, Inc.)
  • Further extending the fund industry’s losing streak, a court allowed excessive-fee allegations regarding five SEI funds to proceed past motion to dismiss: “While the allegations in the Amended Complaint may well not survive summary judgment, they are sufficient to survive the motion-to-dismiss stage.” (Curd v. SEI Invs. Mgmt. Corp.)
  • A court mostly denied the motion by Sterling Capital to dismiss a fraud lawsuit filed by its affiliated bank’s customer. (Bowers v. Branch Banking & Trust Co.)
  • A court consolidated excessive-fee litigation regarding the Voya Global Real Estate Fund. (In re Voya Global Real Estate Fund S’holder Litig.)

Briefs

  • Parties filed their oppositions to dueling motions for summary judgment in fee litigation regarding eight Hartford mutual funds. Plaintiffs’ section 36(b) claims, first filed in 2011, previously survived Hartford’s motion to dismiss. The summary judgment papers are unavailable on PACER. (Kasilag v. Hartford Inv. Fin. Servs. LLC; Kasilag v. Hartford Funds Mgmt. Co.)

The Alt Perspective: Commentary and news from DailyAlts.

dailyaltsDespite being the summer, there was no slowdown in activity around liquid alternatives in July. Seven new alternative mutual funds and ETFs came to market, bringing the year to date total to 79. And in addition to the new fund launches, private equity titans Apollo and Carlyle both announced plans to launch alternative mutual funds later this year. For Carlyle, this is their second time to the dance and this time they have picked TCW as their partner. Carlyle purchased a majority interest in TCW early 2013 and will wisely be leveraging the firm’s distribution into the retail market. In a similar vein, Apollo has partnered with Ivy and will look to Ivy for distribution leadership.

Apollo and Carlyle’s plans follow on the heals of KKR’s partnership with Altegris for the launch of a private equity offering for the “mass affluent” earlier this year, and Blackstone’s partnership with Columbia on a multi-alternative fund, also announced earlier this year. Distribution is key, and the private equity shops are starting to figure that out.

Asset Flows

Asset flows into liquid alternative funds (mutual funds and ETFs combined) continued on their positive streak for the sixth consecutive month, with total flows in June of more than $2.2 billion according to Morningstar’s June 2015 U.S. Asset Flows Update report.

For the fifth consecutive month, multi-alternative funds have dominated inflows into liquid alternatives as investors look for a one-stop shop for their alternatives allocation. Both long/short equity and market neutral have experienced outflows every month in 2015, while non-traditional bonds has had outflows in 5 of 6 months this year. Quite a change from 2014 when both long/short equity and non-traditional bonds ruled the roost.

monthly flows

Twelve month flows look fairly consistent with June’s flows with multi-alternative and managed futures funds leading the way, and long/short equity, market neutral and non-traditional bonds seeing the largest outflows.

flows

Trends and Research

There were several worthwhile publications distributed in July that provide more depth to the liquid alts conversation. The firsts is the annual Morningstar / Barron’s survey of financial advisors, which notes that advisors are more inclined to allocate to liquid alternatives than they were last year. A summary of the results can be found here: Morningstar and Barron’s Release National Alternatives Survey Results.

In addition to the survey, both Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs published research papers on liquid alternatives. Both papers are designed to help investors better understand the category of investments and how to use them in a portfolio:

Educational Videos

Finally, we published a series of video interviews with several portfolio managers of leading alternative mutual funds, as well as a three part series with Keith Black, Managing Director of Exams and Curriculum of the CAIA Association. All of the videos can be viewed here: DailyAlts Videos. More will be on the way over the next couple weeks, so check back periodically.

Observer Fund Profiles

Each month the Observer provides in-depth profiles of between two and four funds. Our “Most Intriguing New Funds” are funds launched within the past couple years that most frequently feature experienced managers leading innovative newer funds. “Stars in the Shadows” are older funds that have attracted far less attention than they deserve.

This month’s profiles are unusual, in that they’re linked to our story on “first funds.” Two of the three are much larger and older than we normally cover, but they make a strong case for themselves.

James Balanced: Golden Rainbow (GLRBX). The fund invests about half of its money in stocks and half in bonds, though the managers have the ability to become much more cautious or much more daring if the situation calls for it. Mostly they’ve been cautious. Their professed goal is “to seek to grow our clients’ assets…while stressing the preservation of principal, and the reduction of risk.” With a loss of just 6% in 2008, they seem to be managing that balance quite well. FYI, this profile was written by our colleague Charles Boccadoro and is substantially more data-rich than most.

TIAA-CREF Lifestyle Conservative (TSCLX). TIAA-CREF’s traditional business has been providing low cost, conservatively managed investment accounts for people working at hospitals, universities and other non-profit organizations.  Lifestyle Conservative is a fund-of-funds with about 40% of its money in stocks and 60% in bonds. They’ve got a short track record, but substantially below-average expenses and a solid lineup of funds in which to invest.

Vanguard STAR (VGSTX). STAR is designed to be Vanguard’s first fund for beginning investors. It invests only in Vanguard’s actively-managed funds, with a portfolio that’s about 60% of its money in stocks and 40% in bonds. The fund’s operating expenses are 0.34% per year, which is very low. The combination of Vanguard + low minimum has always had it on my short-list of funds for new investors.

We delayed publication of July’s fund profile while we finished some due diligence. Sorry ‘bout that but we’d rather get the facts right than rush to print.

Eventide Healthcare & Life Sciences (ETNHX): Morningstar’s 2015 conference included a laudatory panel celebrating “up and coming” funds, including the five star, $2 billion Eventide Gilead. And yet as I talked with the Eventide professionals the talk kept returning to the fund that has them more excited, Healthcare & Life Sciences. The fund’s combination of a strong record with a uniquely qualified manager compels a closer look.

 

Launch Alert

triadTriad Small Cap Value Fund (TSCVX) launched on June 29, 2015. Triad promises a concentrated but conservative take on small cap investing.

The fund is managed by John Heldman and David Hutchison, both of Triad Investment Management. The guys both have experience managing money for larger firms, including Bank of America, Deutsche Bank and Neuberger Berman. They learned from the experience, but one of the things they learned was that “we’d had enough of working for larger firms … having our own shop means we have a much more flexible organization and we’ll be able do what’s right for our investors.” Triad manages about $130 million for investors, mostly through separate accounts.

The Adviser analyzes corporate financial statements, management presentations, specialized research publications, and general news sources specifically focused on three primary aspects of each company: the degree of business competitive strength, whether management is capable and co-invested in the business, and the Adviser’s assessment of the attractiveness of a security’s valuation.

The guys approach is similar to Bernie Horn and the Polaris team: invest only where you think you can meaningfully project a firm’s future, look for management that makes smart capital allocation decisions, make conservative assumptions and demand a 50% discount to fair value.

That discipline means that some good companies are not good investments. Firms in technology and biotech, for example, are subject to such abrupt disruption of their business models that it’s impossible to have confidence in a three to five year projection. Other fundamentally attractive firms have simply been bid too high to provide any margin of safety.

They’re looking for 30-45 names in the portfolio, most of which they’ve followed for years. The tiny fund and the larger private strategy are both fully invested now despite repeated market highs. While they agree that “there aren’t hundreds of great opportunities, not a huge amount at all,” the small cap universe is so large that they’re still finding attractive opportunities.

The minimum initial purchase is $5,000. The opening expense ratio is 1.5% with a 2.0% redemption fee on shares held under 90 days.

The fund’s website is still pretty rudimentary but there’s a good discussion of their Small Cap Equity strategy available on the advisor’s site. For reasons unclear, Mornignstar’s profile of the fund aims you to the homepage of the Wireless Fund (WIREX). Don’t go there, it won’t help.

Funds in Registration

There are 17 new funds in registration this month. Funds in registration with the SEC are not available for sale to the public and the advisors are not permitted to talk about them, but a careful reading of the filed prospectuses gives you a good idea of what interesting (and occasionally appalling) options are in the pipeline. Funds currently in registration will generally be available for purchase right around the end of September, which would allow the new funds to still report a full quarter’s worth of results in 2015.

The most important new registrations are a series of alternatives funds about to be launched by TCW. They’ve partnered with several distinguished sub-advisers, including our friends at Gargoyle who, at our first reading of the filings, are offered the best options including both Gargoyle Hedged Value and, separately, the unhedged Gargoyle long portfolio as a free-standing fund.

Manager Changes

There are 45 manager changes, at least if you don’t mind a bit of cheating on our part. Wyatt Lee’s arrival as co-manager marginally affected all the funds in the T. Rowe Price retirement series but we called that just one change. None are game-changers.

Updates

The Board at LS Opportunity Fund (LSOFX) just announced their interim plan for dealing with the departure of the fund’s adviser. Jim Hillary of Independence Capital Asset Partners and formerly of Marsico Capital, LLC ran LSOFX side-by-side with his ICAP hedge fund from 2010-2015. It’s been an above-average performer, though not a stunning one. DailyAlts reports that Mr. Hillary has decided to retire and return the hedge fund’s assets to its investors. The LS Board appointed Prospector Partners LLC to sub-advise the fund for now; come fall, they’ll ask shareholders for authority to add sub-advisors.

The Prospector folks come with excellent credentials but a spotty record. The managers have a lot of experience managing funds for White Mountains Insurance, T. Rowe Price (both Capital Appreciation and Growth Stock) and Neuberger Berman (Genesis). Prospector Capital Appreciation (PCAFX) was positioned as a nimbler version of T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation (PRWCX), run by Cap App’s long-time manager. The fund did well during the meltdown but has trailed 99% of its peers since. Prospector Opportunity (POPFX) has done better, also by limiting losses in down markets at the price of losing some of the upside in rising ones.

The Board of Trustees has approved a change Zeo Strategic Income’s investment objective. Right now the fund seeks “income and moderate capital appreciation.” Effective August 31, 2015, the Fund’s investment objective will be to seek “low volatility and absolute returns consisting of income and moderate capital appreciation.” From our conversations with the folks at Zeo, that’s not a change; it’s an editorial clarification and a symbolic affirmation of their core values.

Briefly Noted . . .

Effective August 1, Value Line is imposing a 0.40% 12(b)1 fee on a fund that hasn’t been launched yet (Centurion) but then offers a 0.13% 12(b)1 waiver for a net 12(b)1 fee of 0.27%. Why? At the same time, they’ve dropped fees on their Core Bond Fund (VAGIX) by two basis points (woo hoo!). Why? Because the change drops them below the 1.0% expense threshold (to 0.99%), which might increase the number of preliminary fund screens they pass. Hard to know whether that will help: over the five years under its current management, the fund has been a lot more volatile (bigger maximum drawdown but much faster recovery) and more profitable than its peers; the question is whether, in uncertain times, investors will buy that combo – even after the generous cost reduction.

Thanks, as always, to The Shadow’s irreplaceable assistance on tracking down the following changes!

SMALL WINS FOR INVESTORS

Effective August 1, 2015, Aspiriant Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund’s (RMEAX) investment advisory fee will be reduced from 0.75% to 0.60%.

CLOSINGS (and related inconveniences)

Invesco International Growth Fund (AIIEX) will close to new investors on October 1, 2015. Nothing says “we’re serious” quite like offering a two-month window for hot money investors to join the fund. The $9 billion fund tends to be a top-tier performer when the market is falling and just okay otherwise.

Tweedy, Browne Global Value Fund II (TBCUX) has closed to new investors. Global Value II is the sibling to Global Value (TBGVX). The difference between them is that Global Value hedges its currency exposure and Global Value II does not. I don’t anticipate an extended closure. Global II has only a half billion in assets, against $9.3 billion in Global, so neither the size of the portfolio nor capacity constraints can explain the closure. A likelier explanation is the need to manage a large anticipated inflow or outflow caused, conceivably, by gaining or losing a single large institutional client.

OLD WINE, NEW BOTTLES

Effective July 9, 2015, the 3D Printing and Technology Fund (TDPNX) becomes the 3D Printing, Robotics and Technology Fund. The fact that General Electric is the fund’s #6 holding signals the essential problem: there simply aren’t enough companies whose earnings are driven by 3D printing or robotics to populate a portfolio, so firms where such earnings are marginal get drawn in.

Effective September 9, 2015, Alpine Accelerating Dividend Fund (AAADX) is getting renamed Alpine Rising Dividend Fund. The prospectus will no longer target “accelerating dividends” as an investment criterion. It’s simultaneously fuzzier and clearer on the issue of portfolio turnover: it no longer refers to the prospect of 150% annual turnover (the new language is “higher turnover”) but is clear that the strategy increases transaction costs and taxable short-term gains.

Calvert Tax-Free Bond Fund (CTTLX) has become Calvert Tax-Free Responsible Impact Bond Fund. “Impact investing” generally refers to the practice of buying the securities of socially desirable enterprises, for example urban redevelopment administrations, as a way of fostering their mission. At the start of September, Calvert Large Cap Value (CLVAX) morphs into Calvert Global Value Fund. The globalization theme continues with the change of Calvert Equity Income Fund (CEIAX) to Calvert Global Equity Income Fund. Strategy tweaks follow.

On September 22, 2015, Castlerigg Equity Event and Arbitrage Fund (EVNTX) becomes Castlerigg Event Driven and Arbitrage Fund. In addition to the name change, Castlerigg made what appear to be mostly editorial changes to the statement of investment strategies. It’s not immediately clear that either will address this:

evntx

Eaton Vance Small-Cap Value Fund has been renamed Eaton Vance Global Small-Cap Fund (EAVSX). Less value, more global. The fund trails more than 80% of its peers over pretty much every trailing measurement period. They’ve added Aidan M. Farrell as a co-manager. Good news: he’s managed Goldman Sachs International Small Cap (GISSX). Bad news: it’s not very good, either.

Effective July 13, 2015 Innovator Matrix Income® Fund became Innovator McKinley Income Fund (IMIFX), with the appointment of a new sub-advisor, McKinley Capital Management, LLC. The fund’s strategy was to harvest income primarily from high income securities which included master limited partnerships and REITs. The “income” part worked and the fund yields north of 10%. The “put the vast majority of your money into energy and real estate” has played out less spectacularly. The new managers bring a new quantitative model and modest changes in the investment strategy, but the core remains “income from equities.”

OFF TO THE DUSTBIN OF HISTORY

Effective October 23, 2015, Alpine Equity Income Fund (the “Fund”) and Alpine Transformations Fund (the “Fund”) will both be absorbed by Alpine Accelerating Dividend Fund. At the same time Alpine Cyclical Advantage Property Fund (the “Fund”) disappears into Alpine Global Infrastructure Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”).

Fidelity Fifty merged into Fidelity Focused Stock Fund (FTQGX) on July 24, 2015, just in case you missed it.

Forward is liquidating their U.S. Government Money Fund by the end of August.

MassMutual Select Small Company Growth Fund will be liquidated by September 28, 2015.

Neuberger Berman Global Thematic Opportunities Fund will disappear around August 21, 2015.

RiverNorth Managed Volatility Fund (RNBWX) is scheduled for a quick exit, on August 7, 2015.

The $1.2 million Stone Toro Long/Short Fund (STVHX) will be liquidated on or about August 19, 2015 following the manager’s resignation from the advisor.

UBS Equity Long-Short Multi-Strategy Fund (BMNAX) takes its place in history alongside the carrier pigeon on September 24, 2015. Advisors don’t have to explain why they’re liquidating a fund. In general, either the fund sucks or nobody is buying it. No problem. I do think it’s bad practice to go out of your way to announce that you’re about to explain your rationale and then spout gibberish.

Rationale for liquidating the Fund

Based upon information provided by UBS … the Board determined that it is in the best interests of the Fund and its shareholders to liquidate and dissolve the Fund pursuant to a Plan of Liquidation. To arrive at this decision, the Board considered factors that have adversely affected, and will continue to adversely affect, the ability of the Fund to conduct its business and operations in an economically viable manner.

Our rationale is that we “considered factors that have adversely affected, and will continue to adversely affect” the fund. Why is that even worth saying? The honest statement would be “we’re in a deep hole, the fund has been losing money for the advisor for five year and even the stronger performance of the past 18 months hasn’t made a difference so we’re cutting our losses.”

In Closing . . .

Sam LeeIn the months ahead we’ll add at least a couple new voices to the Observer’s family. Sam Lee, a principal of Severian Asset and former editor of Morningstar’s ETF Investor, would like to profile a fund for you in September. Leigh Walzer, a principal of Trapezoid LLC and a former member of Michael Price’s merry band at the Mutual Series funds, will join us in October to provide careful, sophisticated quantitative analyses of the most distinguished funds in a core investment category.

We’ve mentioned the development of a sort of second tier at the Observer, where we might be able to provide folks with access to some interesting data, Charles’s risk-sensitive fund screener and such. We’re trying to be very cautious in talking about any of those possibilities because we hate over-promising. But we’re working hard to make good stuff happen. More soon!

Our September issue will start with the following argument: it’s not time to give up on managers who insist on investing in Wall Street’s most despised creature: the high-quality, intelligently managed U.S. corporation. A defining characteristic of a high-quality corporation is the capital allocation decisions made by its leaders. High-quality firms invest intelligently, consistently, successfully, in their futures. Those are “capital expenditures” and investors have come to loathe them because investing in the future thwarts our desire to be rich, rich, rich, now, now, now. In general I loathe the editorial pages of The Wall Street Journal since they so often start with an ideologically mandated conclusion and invent the necessary supporting evidence. William Galston’s recent column, “Hillary gets it right on short-termism” (07/29/2015) is a grand exception:

Too many CEOs are making decisions based on short-term considerations, regardless of their impact on the long-run performance of their firms.

Laurence Fink is the chairman of BlackRock … expressed his concern that “in the wake of the financial crisis, many companies have shied away from investing in the future growth of their companies,” choosing instead to reduce capital expenditures in favor of higher dividends and increased stock buybacks.

His worries rest on a sound factual foundation. For the 454 companies listed continuously in the S&P 500 between 2004 and 2013, stock buybacks consumed 51% of net income and dividends an additional 35%, leaving only 14% for all other purposes.

It wasn’t always this way. As recently as 1981, buybacks constituted only 2% of the total net income of the S&P 500. But when economist William Lazonick examined the 248 firms listed continuously in this index between 1984 and 2013, he found an inexorable rise in buybacks’ share of net income: 25% in the 1984-1993 decade; 37% in 1994-2003; 47% in 2004-13. Between 2004 and 2013, some of America’s best-known corporations returned more than 100% of their income to shareholders through buybacks and dividends.

He cites a 2005 survey of CEOs, 80% of whom would cut R&D and 55% would avoid long-term capex if that’s what it took to meet their quarterly earnings expectations. We’ve been talking with folks like David Rolfe of Wedgewood, Zac Wydra of Beck, Mack and others who are taking their lumps for refusing to play along. We’ll share their argument as well as bring our modestly-delayed story on the Turner funds, Sam’s debut, and Charles’ return.

We’ll look for you.

David

Vanguard STAR (VGSTX), August 2015

By David Snowball

Objective and strategy

This fund of funds seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation and income. As a fund of funds, Vanguard STAR invests in other Vanguard mutual funds.  It places 60% to 70% of its assets in common stocks through eight stock funds; 20% to 30% of its assets in bonds through two bond funds; and 10% to 20% of its assets in short-term investments through a short-term bond fund. The stock funds emphasize larger, well-established companies and the bond funds focus on securities issued by highly-rated borrowers. Vanguard calls it their “one fund option for investors looking for broad diversification across asset classes who can tolerate moderate market risk that comes from the volatility of the stock and bond markets.”

Adviser

The Vanguard Group, Inc. The Japanese bestow the designation “Living National Treasure” on individuals of incomparable skill who work to preserve precious elements of the culture. If the US had such as designation, Vanguard founder Jack Bogle would certainly qualify for it. He founded Vanguard in May, 1975 as the industry’s only non-profit, investor-owned fund complex; in the succeeding decades he has been consistently, successfully critical of marketing-driven investing fads and high expenses. Vanguard advertises “at cost” investing and their investor expenses are consistently the industry’s lowest. They advise 160 U.S. funds (including variable annuity portfolios) and about 120 funds for non-U.S. investors. In total they have 20 million investors and are responsible for more than $3 trillion in assets.

Managers

Michael Buek, William Coleman and Walter Nejman. The guys are mostly responsible for which of the portfolio’s funds get a bit more money and which get a bit less. The list of which funds they use hasn’t changed since 2001 and the fund’s asset allocation wobbles just a little. Their responsibilities are so administrative that from 1985 to 2009, the fund listed itself as having “no manager.”

Management’s stake in the fund

In general, you should look for funds whose managers invest a lot of their own money alongside your money. In this case, the managers have almost no investment in the fund but that’s not very important since their responsibilities are so limited.

Opening date

March 29, 1985

Minimum investment

$1,000. While Vanguard offers an automatic investing plan option, they don’t reduce the minimum for such accounts. That said, the STAR minimum is one-third of what Vanguard normally expects and the monthly minimum once you’ve opened an account is $1.

Expense ratio

0.34% on assets of $22.7 billion, as of July 2023.

Comments

Why invest in Vanguard STAR? There are three reasons to consider it.

First, the fund invests in a way that is broadly diversified and reasonably cautious. 60-70% of its money is invested in stocks, 20-30% in bonds and 10-20% in conservative short-term investments. Its stock portfolio mostly focuses on large, well-established companies and it gives you more exposure to the world beyond the U.S. than most of its peers do. International stocks constitute 21% of the portfolio but are only 13% for its average peer. That means investors are being given access to some additional sources of gain that most comparable funds skip.

Second, Vanguard is very good. There are two sorts of funds, those which simply buy all of the stocks or bonds in a particular index without trying to judge whether they’re good or bad (these are called “passive” funds) and those whose managers try to invest in only the best stocks or bonds (called “active” funds). Vanguard typically hires outside firms to manage their active funds and they do a very good job of finding and overseeing good managers. Vanguard and its funds operate with far lower expenses than its peers, on average, 0.19% per year for funds investing primarily in U.S. stocks. Even Vanguard’s most expensive funds charge less than half as much as their industry peers. Every dollar not spent on running the fund is a dollar that remains in your account.

Third, STAR is the most accessible way to build a Vanguard portfolio. STAR builds its portfolio around 11 actively-managed Vanguard funds.  They are:

  Which invests primarily in …
Windsor II Large U.S. companies whose stock is temporarily out of favor
Windsor The same sorts of stocks as Windsor II, but somewhat more aggressively
U.S. Growth well-known blue-chip stocks
Morgan Growth large- and mid-sized U.S. companies
PRIMECAP large- and mid-sized fast growing U.S. companies
International Growth non-U.S. companies with high growth potential
International Value non-U.S. companies from developed and emerging markets around the world that are temporarily undervalued
Explorer small U.S. companies with growth potential
Long-Term Investment-Grade medium-and high-quality investment-grade corporate bonds
GNMA GNMA is a government-owned corporation that backs mortgage loans made by the Veterans Administration and Federal Housing Authority; this fund invests in government mortgage-backed securities issued by GNMA.
Short-Term Investment-Grade Bond high- and medium-quality, investment-grade bonds with short-term maturities.

If you wanted to buy that same collection of funds one-by-one, you’d need to have $33,000 to invest. Dan Wiener, publisher of the well-respected Independent Advisor for Vanguard Investors newsletter, suggests eight funds in a model portfolio akin to STAR. That would require $24,000 upfront and you’d have to deal with the fact that PRIMECAP is no longer accepting new investors.

Bottom Line

STAR has been around for 30 years and has been a quiet, reliable performer. Its portfolio represents a cautious approach to some investment types (for example, stocks in the emerging markets) that its peers mostly avoid. Coupled with its substantial cost advantage over its peers, STAR has been able to outperform three-quarters of its peers. It has returned about 7% per year over the past decade, about 1% per year above the competition, but has been a little less risky. It’s a great all-around fund designed to do well year after year rather than post eye-popping returns over the short term.

Fund website

Vanguard STAR profile. You can keep track of your account by downloading the Vanguard app which works with iPhones, Android and Kindle. When you go to Vanguard’s “invest with us” page, here’s what you’ll see:

vanguard account

So you’ll need just seven pieces of information (eight if you include “your name”) to get started. When you’re asked what you’d like done with your dividends and capital gains, choose “reinvest them” so that the money stays in your account and keeps growing. Otherwise you’ll get them deducted from your account and mailed to you as a check.

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TIAA-CREF Lifestyle Conservative (TSCLX), August 2015

By David Snowball

Objective and strategy

The fund seeks long-term total return, consisting of both current income and capital appreciation. It is a “fund of funds” that invests in the low-cost Institutional Class shares of other TIAA-CREF funds. It is designed for investors targeting a conservative risk-return profile. In general, 40% of the fund’s assets are invested in stocks and 60% in bonds. The managers can change those allocations by as much as 10% up or down depending upon current market conditions and outlook.

Adviser

TIAA-CREF. It stands for “Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association – College Retirement Equities Fund,” which tells you a lot about them. They were founded in 1918 to help secure the retirements of college teachers; their original backers were Andrew Carnegie and his Carnegie Foundation. Their mission eventually broadened to serving people who work in the academic, research, medical and cultural fields. More recently, their funds became available to the general public. TIAA-CREF manages almost $900 billion dollars for its five million investors. Because so much of their business is with highly-educated professionals concerned about their retirement, TIAA-CREF focuses on fundamentally sound strategies with little trendiness or flash and on keeping expenses as lower as possible. 70% of their investment products have earned four- or five-star ratings from Morningstar and the company is consistently rated as one of America’s best employers.

Manager

John Cunniff and Hans Erickson, who have managed the fund since its inception.

Management’s stake in the fund

We generally look for funds where the managers have placed a lot of their own money to work beside yours. Mssrs. Cunniff and Erickson each have $500,001 – $1,000,000 invested in the fund, which qualifies as “a lot.”

Opening date

December 9, 2011. Many of the funds in which the managers invest are much older than that.

Minimum investment

$2,500. That is reduced to $100 if you sign up for an automatic investing plan.

Expense ratio

0.76% on $310 million in assets, as of July 2023. 

Comments

Lifestyle Conservative offers many of the same attractions as Vanguard STAR (VGSTX) but does so with a more conservative asset allocation. Here are three arguments on its behalf.

First, the fund invests in a way that is broadly diversified and pretty conservative. 40% of its money is invested in stocks, 40% in high-quality bonds and the last 20% in short-term bonds. That’s admirably cautious. They then take measured risks within their various investments (for example, their stock portfolio is more tilted toward international stocks and emerging markets stocks than are their peers) to help boost returns.

Second, TIAA-CREF is very good. There are two sorts of funds, those which simply buy all of the stocks or bonds in a particular index without trying to judge whether they’re good or bad (these are called “passive” funds) and those whose managers try to invest in only the best stocks or bonds (called “active” funds). TSCLX invests in a mix of the two with active funds receiving about 90% of the cash. CREF’s management teams tend to be pretty stable (the average tenure is close to nine years); most managers handle just one or two funds and most invest heavily (north of $100,000 per manager per fund) in their funds. CREF and its funds operate with far lower expenses than its peers, on average, 0.43% per year for funds investing primarily in U.S. stocks. Even their most expensive fund charges 40% less than their industry peers. Every dollar not spent on running the fund is a dollar that remains in your account.

Third, Lifestyle Conservative is a very easy way to build a very well-diversified portfolio.  Lifestyle Conservative builds its portfolio around 15 actively-managed and three passively-managed TIAA-CREF funds.  They are:

  Which invests in
Large-Cap Growth   large companies in new and emerging areas of the economy that appear poised for growth
Large-Cap Value   Large companies, mostly in the US, whose stock is undervalued based on an evaluation of their potential worth
Enhanced Large-Cap Growth Index   Quantitative models try to help it put extra money into the most attractive stocks in the US Large Cap Growth index; it tries to sort of “tilt” a traditional index
Enhanced Large-Cap Value Index   Quantitative models try to help it put extra money into the most attractive stocks in the US Large Cap Value index
Mid-Cap Growth   Medium-sized US companies with strong earnings growth
Mid-Cap Value   Temporarily undervalued mid-sized companies
Growth & Income   Large US companies which are paying healthy dividends or buying back their stock
Small-Cap Equity   smaller domestic companies across a wide range of sectors, growth rates and valuations
International Equity   Stocks of stable and growing non-US companies
International Opportunities   Stocks of foreign firms that might have great potential but a limited track record
Emerging Markets Equity   Stocks of firms located in emerging markets such as India and China
Enhanced International Equity Index Quantitative models try to help it put extra money into the most attractive stocks in the International Equity index
Global Natural Resources   Firms around the world involved in energy, metals, agriculture and other commodities
Bond   High quality US bonds
Bond Plus   70% investment grade bonds and 30% spicier fare, such as emerging markets bonds or high-yield debt
High-Yield   Mostly somewhat riskier, higher-yielding bonds for US and foreign corporations
Short-Term Bond   Short-term, investment grade US government and corporate bonds
Money Market   Ultra-safe, lower-returning CDs and such

Bottom Line

Lifestyle Conservative has been a fine performer since launch. It has returned 7.5% annually over the past three years. That’s about 2% per year better than average, which places it in the top 20% of all conservative hybrid funds. While it trails more venturesome funds such as Vanguard STAR in good markets, it holds up substantially better than they do in falling markets.  That combination led Morningstar to award it four stars, their second-highest rating.

Fund website

TIAA-CREF Lifestyle Conservative homepage there is also another website from which you can download the fact sheet which gives you updated information on what the fund has been investing in and how it’s doing. From there it’s easy to open a mutual fund account and set up your AIP.

If you’ve got an iPhone, you can manage your account with their TIAA-CREF Savings Simplifier app. If instead, you sport an Android device (all the cool kids do!), head over to the Play store and check out the TIAA-CREF app there. It doesn’t offer all the functionality of the iOS app, but it does come with much higher customer ratings.

[cr2015]

Eventide Healthcare & Life Sciences Fund (ETNHX), August 2015

By David Snowball

Objective and strategy

The Eventide Healthcare & Life Sciences Fund seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation. The manager selects equity and equity-related securities of firms in the healthcare and life sciences sectors. The manager’s valuation standards aren’t spelled out, except to say that he’s looking for “attractively valued securities.” The advisor imposes a set of ESG screens so that it limits itself to firms that “operate with integrity and create value for customers, employees, and other stakeholders,” which includes its immediate community and the broader society. Some of the firms in which it invests, especially in the biotech sector, are “development stage companies,” which implies that their stock is illiquid and potentially very volatile. Up to 15% of the portfolio might be invested in such securities. At the same time, up to 10% can be invested in derivatives that help hedge the portfolio.

Adviser

Eventide Asset Management, LLC. Founded in 2008, Eventide is a Boston-based adviser that specializes in faith-based and socially responsible investing. They manage more than $2 billion in assets through their two (and soon to be three) mutual funds.

Manager

Finny Kuruvilla. Dr. Kuruvilla has been a busy bee. In addition to managing the Eventide funds, he’s a Principal with Clarus Ventures, a health care venture capital firm with $1.7 billion in assets. In that role, he sits on several corporate boards. He has earned an MD from Harvard Medical School, a PhD in Chemistry and Chemical Biology from Harvard, a master’s in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT, and a bachelor’s degree from Caltech in Chemistry. Somewhere in there he completed medical residencies at two major Boston hospitals and served as a research fellow at MIT. He completed his residency and fellowship at the Brigham & Women’s Hospital and Children’s Hospital Boston where he cared for adult and pediatric patients suffering from a variety of hematologic, oncologic, and autoimmune disorders. Subsequently, he was a research fellow at MIT where he did incredibly complicated statistical stuff. He’s coauthored 15 peer-reviewed articles in science journals and also manages Eventide Gilead Fund.

Strategy capacity and closure

“Strategy capacity” refers to the amount of money that a manager believes he or she can handle without compromising the strategy’s prospects. Sometimes the limitation is imposed by the nature of the strategy (microcap strategies can handle less money than megacap ones) and sometimes by the limits of the investment team’s time and attention. In general, managers who can articulate the limits of their strategy and have thought through how they’ll handle excess inflows do better in the long run than those you make it up as they go. The Eventide managers report that “Eventide has not discussed closing the fund and is not expecting capacity issues until the fund gets to about $2 billion in AUM.”

Active share

Unknown.  “Active share” measures the degree to which a fund’s portfolio differs from the holdings of its benchmark portfolio. High active share indicates management which is providing a portfolio that is substantially different from, and independent of, the index. An active share of zero indicates perfect overlap with the index, 100 indicates perfect independence.  The fund’s active share hasn’t been calculated, though its low correlation with its benchmark suggests a fairly active approach.

Management’s stake in the fund

Dr. Kuruvilla has invested under $100,000 in this fund and between $100,001-$500,000 across his two funds. None of the fund’s independent trustees have any investment in the Eventide funds. As of October 1, 2014, the officers and Trustees collectively owned less than 1% of the fund shares; that translates to less than $200,000.

Opening date

December 27, 2012

Minimum investment

$1,000 for a regular account, $1,000 for an IRA account, or $100 for an automatic investment plan account.

Expense ratio

For class A shares: 1.56%, class C shares: 2.31%, class I shares: 1.31%, and class N shares: 1.51% on assets of $1.8 Billion, as of July 2023. There is a 1% redemption fee for shares held fewer than 180 days.

Comments

The argument for Eventide Healthcare is pretty straightforward: it’s the hottest fund in the hottest sector of the U.S. economy and it’s led by a manager with an unparalleled breadth of training and experience.

The Wall Street Journal’s mid-year report on the mutual funds with the best 10-year performance offered the following list of specialties:

  1. Biotech
  2. Biotech
  3. Health sciences
  4. Pharmaceuticals
  5. Biotech
  6. Biotech
  7. Biotech
  8. Health sciences
  9. Biotech
  10. 2x leveraged NASDAQ

Those funds earned an average of 19% per year. At the same time, the Total Stock Market Index clocked in at 8% per year.

And so far in its short life, Eventide Healthcare is among the field’s strongest performers. It has, since inception, handily beaten both the field and the field’s two most-respected funds, Vanguard Health Care (VGHCX, the only fund endorsed by Morningstar analysts) and T. Rowe Price Health Sciences (PRHSX).  Here are the returns on a hypothetical $10,000 investment made on the day Eventide launched in December 2012:

Eventide HealthCare 26,990
T. Rowe Price Health Sciences 24,750
Health care peer group 22,750
Vanguard Health Care 21,440

In 2015, through the end of July, Eventide has returned 28.6% – 9% better than the average healthcare fund and 25% above the broad stock market. Despite those soaring returns, Mr. Kuruvilla concludes that the key biotech “sector is significantly less overvalued than the S&P 500 as a whole. While individual biotech companies may indeed be overvalued, we see no reason to believe that overvaluation is endemic in the sector.”

Much of the credit belongs to its manager, Finny Kuruvilla. His academic accomplishments are formidable. As I note above, Dr. Kuruvilla has an MD and a PhD in chemical biology (both from Harvard) and a master’s degree in engineering and computer science (from MIT). His professional investing career includes both the Eventide fund and a venture capital fund. That second tier of experience is important, since VC funds tend both to be far more activist – that is, far more intimately involved in the development of their charges – than mutual funds and to focus on a distinct set of early stage firms whose prospects might explode. About 70% of the Eventide fund is invested in biotech stocks and 40% in microcaps; most of the remainder are small cap firms.

The other investor with a similar range of expertise was Kris Jenner, the now-departed manager of T. Rowe Price Health Sciences. Mr. Jenner managed to leverage his deep academic and professional knowledge of the growing edge of the healthcare universe – biotech firms, among others – into the third best 10-year record among the 7000 funds that Morningstar tracks.

That said, prospective investors need to attend to four red flags:

  1. The manager has two masters. Mr. Kuruvilla is a principal at Clarus Ventures, a healthcare venture capital firm with $1.7 billion in assets. He’s managed investments for both firms since 2008. That might raise two concerns. The first is whether he’s able to juggle both sets of obligations, especially as assets grow. The second is how he handles potential conflicts of interest between his two charges. If, for example, he discovers a fascinating illiquid security, he might need to choose whether to invest for the benefit of his Clarus shareholders or his Eventide ones.

    Eventide’s conflict-of-interest policy addresses his role at Clarus, but mostly concerning how he will deal with non-public information and trading in his personal accouts, not how he would deal with potential conflicts between the needs of the two funds.

  2. Asset growth might impair the strategy. The fund is attracting steadily inflows. It has grown from $40 million at the end of 2013 to $150 million at the end of 2014 to $300 million at the start of July, 2015. By the end of July, they’d reached $350 million. For a fund whose success is driven by its ability to find and fund firms in “the smallcap biotech space,” 40% of which are microcaps and some of whom are privately traded and illiquid, sustained asset growth is a real concern. Sadly that growth has not yet translated into low expenses; it is the third most-expensive of the 31 health care funds.

  3. The question of volatility needs to be addressed. Despite its ability to hedge volatility, the fund declined by almost 20% in the late spring and early summer, 2014. Its peers dropped 7.4% in the same period. Since inception, its downside deviation and Ulcer Index, a measure that combines the magnitude and duration of a drawdown, are two to three times higher than its peers.

    The managers are aware of the issue, but consider it to be part of the price of admission. David Barksdale, co-portfolio manager on the Gilead fund and managing partner of Eventide, writes:  

    A draw-down like that in early 2014 for the Healthcare fund should be considered normal for the fund. There was a pullback in biotech stocks at that time and these are a regular feature of the industry. Although individual biotech companies tend to be uncorrelated on their fundamentals, investors tend to trade their stocks as a group via ETF’s or otherwise and investor sentiment changes can precipitate these kinds of draw-downs.

    He reports that “we generally see these drawdowns at least once a year.” The ability to exploit the market’s excessive reactions are an essential part of generating outsized gains (“We tend to keep some cash on hand in the fund to be able to take advantage of these pullbacks as buying opportunities.”) but they may prove difficult for some investors to ride through.

  4. The quality of shareholder communications is surprisingly low. Communication between the manager and retail shareholders is limited to a three page letter, covering both funds, in the Annual Report. The semi-annual report contains no text and there are no shareholder letters. There are quarterly conference calls but those are limited to financial advisers; copies are password protected. The adviser does maintain a rich archive of the managers’ media appearances.

Bottom Line

Eventide Healthcare and Life Sciences has a fascinating pedigree and a outstanding early record. Mr. Kuruvilla has the breadth of experience at training – both academic and professional – to give him a distinct and sustained competitive advantage over his peers. That said, enough questions persist that investors need to approach the fund cautiously, if at all.

Fund website

Eventide Healthcare and Life Sciences

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