Investing in Mutual Funds is a Loser?s Game! Here?s Why


Published: February 06, 2012 by RssFeed
The amount of evidence stacking up that…mutual funds…do not provide value for their investors is just staggering…While there are certainly signs that the public’s tolerance of excessive fees and executive pay is falling, the likelihood of significant structural change in the finance industry is still remote. Given such a backdrop the probability remains that investors in funds will, on average, continue to underperform their benchmarks. So what is an investor to do? [Read on!] Words: 830

So says Edward Croft (www.stockopedia.co.uk) in edited excerpts from his original article* which Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.FinancialArticleSummariesToday.com (A site for sore eyes and inquisitive minds) and www.munKNEE.com (Your Key to Making Money!) has edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) below for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. The article’s views and conclusions are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original article. Please note that this paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.

Croft goes on to say, in part:

We still believe that individuals who have the time and discipline to do their own research and think outside the box should look to invest the equity portion of their own funds directly in the stock market. We appreciate that not every investor has the interest or inclination to do this but a few more might be likely to if they seriously considered how compromised the alternative is.

Who in the world is currently reading this article along with you? Click here

Here follows a rundown of ten key reasons why investing in managed funds is such a losers game and then we propose a few alternatives:
  1. Underperformance. It has been shown that 75% of investment funds under-perform the stock market averages over the long term, not least due to the compounding impact of high fees and trading commissions.
  2. Hidden Costs. The real cost of owning a fund is not published – it is hidden away as reduced performance. Once transaction costs, tax costs, cash drag, soft dollar arrangements and advisory fees are added to the published expense ratios the total annual cost of owning a fund can be over 4%!
  3. Agency Issues. Most fund managers typically get rich on fees rather than from making good investments skewing their incentives towards asset gathering and retention rather than investment performance…
  4. Size Bias. Due to the above, institutions often get too big to invest meaningfully in smaller companies which much research has shown offer the best opportunity for outperformance.
  5. Career Risk. Fund managers’ careers may be at risk if they don’t report consistent quarterly results. This bias promotes short termism, over-trading, ‘herd’ behaviour and the chasing of momentum stocks which can often end catastrophically.
  6. The ‘Star’ Issue. Evidence is growing that traditional ‘star’ stock picking fund managers like Bill Miller and Anthony Bolton are struggling to adapt to the evolving ‘risk on, risk off’ market structure. Many have been registering significant underperformance in recent years.
  7. Time Weighting of Performance. The average dollar invested in a fund radically underperforms the reported return. This is primarily due to the fact that funds report their returns in a time weighted rather than dollar weighted fashion – a statistical trick chosen to inflate apparent returns to potential investors.
  8. Mean Reversion. Are you attracted to a fund with strong historic returns? Don’t be! Returns have a tendency to mean revert and underperform in the*future. A recent study showed that “when managers were compelled to invest extra cash from investor inflows in stocks, they were unable to beat the market.”
  9. Redemption Delay. It can often take days or even weeks to sell a fund. As many investors found out to their great cost in the credit crunch, in times of poor liquidity the possibility of getting your money out of less liquid funds at all can be significantly reduced!
  10. Lack of Transparency. While some funds do publish their ‘top holdings’ many funds are clothed in secrecy begging the question of what is it that you actually own? The Bernie Madoff saga clearly showed how such a lack of transparency can end disastrously.
As we’ve discussed elsewhere, the reason fund managers can’t beat the market is NOT because the market is unbeatable but, essentially, because the fund management industry shows evidence of institutionally bad decision making, herd behaviour and excessive compensation.
If you are enjoying this article why not sign up here to have all the articles posted on munKNEE.com automatically deposited into your inbox on a daily basis. It is easy to unsubscribe at a future date if you change your mind.

What Are the Alternatives?

If investors are looking for long term security, then they should take matters into their own hands by learning to invest their portfolio themselves. If you can’t find the time and discipline to dedicate to stock market investment (which is probably likely!), we still recommend investing in the stock market, but you should focus on the very lowest cost passively managed funds. ETFs and Index funds are the best bet and have been shown to beat 75% of actively managed funds. Warren Buffett has been quoted as saying “If you have 2% a year of your funds being eaten up by fees you’re going to have a hard time matching an index fund in my view.” In fact, Warren Buffett believes so strongly that index funds will beat hedge funds over the long run that he’s even put a $1m bet on the S&P500 beating a fund of funds over a 10 year basis.

Conclusion

The good news is that the growing social clamour over high fees and excessive pay is leading to an increasing number of low cost ETFs and quantitatively managed funds hitting the market for investors.

The future certainly is looking a lot brighter for investors in funds, but stay vigilant, always think of the costs and think before you act!

*http://www.stockopedia.co.uk/content...rs-game-63776/
Why spend time surfing the internet looking for informative and well-written articles when we do it for you. We assess hundreds of articles every day, identify the best and then post edited excerpts of them to provide you with a fast and easy read. Sign-up for Automatic Receipt of Articles in your Inbox or get access to every article on FACEBOOK | and/or TWITTER so as not to miss any of the best financial articles on the internet.

Related Articles:

1. Your Portfolio Isn’t Adequately Diversified Without 7-15% in Precious Metals – Here’s Why



The traditional view of portfolio management is that three asset classes, stocks, bonds and cash, are sufficient to achieve diversification. This view is, quite simply, wrong because over the past 10 years gold, silver and platinum have singularly outperformed virtually all major widely accepted investment indexes. Precious metals should be considered an independent asset class and an allocation to precious metals, as the most uncorrelated asset group, is essential for proper portfolio diversification. [Let me explain.] Words: 2137

2. What Works on Wall Street? James O’Shaughnessy Tells All!



History has shown that investors who stick to disciplined, fundamental-focused strategies give themselves a good chance of beating the market over the long haul and one of the investment gurus who has compiled the most data on that topic is James O’Shaughnessy, whose book What Works on Wall Street became something of a bible for investment strategies when it was released 15 years ago. Now, O’Shaughnessy has released an updated version of his book, with a plethora of new data on various investment strategies. Using data that stretches back to before the Great Depression in some cases, O’Shaughnessy back-tests numerous strategies, and comes to some very intriguing conclusions. [Let me share some of them with you.] Words: 1345

3. Don’t Confuse “Risk” with “Volatility” – It Could Have Dire Consequences on Your Investments



[I am surprised at the large number of] investment professionals who confuse risk and volatility… regularly and thoroughly confusing these two concepts to the point where the terms are treated as being virtually synonymous. This has resulted in the flawed investment principle that reducing volatility will (and must) reduce risk. Such thinking is deeply misguided, and following it has dire consequences for investors. [Let me explain more about what risk and volatility are and are not.] Words: 1100

4. Market -Timing Pays BIG Dividends for Income Investors – Here’s Why



Many income investors have been taught to believe that “market-timing” is anathema to their investment objectives and/or that it can’t be done successfully… I will argue that this piece of conventional wisdom is false – dangerously false. In a three-part series of essays, I will argue that market-timing needs to be incorporated as a fundamental component of income investing. I will demonstrate why market-timing is important, when it should be applied and how it should be implemented. [Read on!] Words: 1956

5. How the Dow 30 Stocks Compare According to Their Margins of Safety



Benjamin Graham, known as the father of value investment, is famous for his simple, yet powerful, valuation method as first explained in his 1973 book, Intelligent Investor, and later updated in his book entitled Renaissance of Value. His “Graham Number” approach has been adapted and applied to all 30 stocks listed on the Dow Jones Industrial Index to determine which of the stocks have above average safety factors – of which only 10 do. Below is an explaination of the approach, the formula and the results for all 30 stocks. Words: 1220

6. Check Out THE Number to Watch for Market Direction


*
Many investors believe the market will rise if the economy is growing and sink if it’s shrinking but that is the wrong way to think about it. Instead, the real focus should be on whether the economy is growing at a slow pace or a moderate pace. Indeed, with 2% growth, the stock market could steadily fall. Yet with 3% Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth, the market could surge. The difference between 2% and 3% may not seem like much, but it is. [Let me explain.] Words: 730
*
7. These are the Top 10 Stocks Based on Yield and Payout Ratio
*

*
I have identified 248 stocks with histories of 10+ years of raising dividends…and ranked the yields and payout ratios of each…to create an average overall rank for each stock. Here are the top 10 on the list. Words: 325
*
8. Size Does Matter: A Look at Market Capitalization and What It Means for Investors
*

*
People choose certain stocks for many different reasons – business location; sector strength; product innovation – but some investors choose what to buy based on company size, or market capitalization [believing that size does matter. Yes,] understanding the difference between small-cap, medium-cap and large-cap companies is the first step to making the right choice. [Let me explain.] Words: 600
*
9. Which Stocks Trade at a Discount to the “Graham Number”?



Benjamin Graham, the “godfather of value investing” created an equation to calculate the maximum fair value for a stock, referred to as the Graham Number and any stock trading at a significant discount to this number would appear undervalued. [Here are the names of 18 such stocks.] Words: 1707

10. Trading Using Technical Analysis is a Mug’s Game! Here’s Why


*
The Web is crawling with technical analysis (TA)…[and,] given its popularity, [begs the questions as to whether or not there] really is something to it. [Based on our research,] the short answer is no, not really, at least not in developed markets like the US or the UK… Furthermore, most of the popular TA indicators that are bandied around are nonsense jargon and should be ignored as useless noise. [Let us explain our position.] Words: 2143
*
11. Forget the EMH: Motivated Stock Pickers CAN Beat the Market!
*

*
What hope can there be for motivated stock pickers – no matter how much they sweat and toil – to outperform the low-cost index funds that simply mechanically track the market? Well – in spite of the absurd rise of the Nobel-acclaimed, and highly promoted, Efficient Market Hypothesis that claims that individual investors can’t beat the market – it turns out there is plenty! Just ask Warren Buffett, for one. [Let me explain.] Words: 1574
__________________
Please note, the content of this page was automatically generated from an external source using RSS Feeds technology. Gold Speculator associates cannot guarantee or verify any information provided on this page. By using this site you are agreeing to the terms of our disclaimer.
Reply With Quote
Reply
Search Gold Speculator Articles


Similar Articles You May Enjoy
Article Title Source Last Comment Date
PCCW's Arena Says HKT Trust IPO Attracted Mutual Funds
0 comments
Bloomberg TV November 28, 2011
Markets Hub: A Ripple Effect for Mutual Funds
0 comments
WallStreetJournal - Business TV August 09, 2011
Enck Discusses Investing in Managed Futures Mutual Funds: Video
0 comments
Bloomberg TV May 14, 2010
Mutual Funds and Stock Investing in India
0 comments
WallStreetJournal - Business TV January 27, 2010
Biderman Says No Money Going to U.S. Stock Mutual Funds: Video
0 comments
Bloomberg TV October 12, 2009




Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com] [Most Recent Exchange Rate from www.kitco.com]

What do you think? Your comments are welcomed.

We appreciate all of your comments and feedback. You need to be registered in order to post comments. You can register here, or sign in. if you have a comment off topic you can post it in our forums section.