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The Actively Managed Mutual Fund Racket


MAR 27 2012, 9:45 AM ET 38
Timothy B. Lee -- Writer with Ars Technica and the Cato Institute
Article from The Atlantic

While I didn't discuss it in detail, one of the implicit points of my last post is an endorsement of index investing. That's the investment strategy that tries to replicate the performance of the market as a whole, at the lowest possible cost. The alternative is to buy into an "actively managed" mutual fund, which has a professional manager that tries to pick assets that will produce above-average returns. I claim that because active portfolio management costs more than passive management, the real-world returns of actively managed funds tend to be lower than passively managed ones.

Reader Moneyrunner disagreed with me:

If you invested in the vaunted, low cost, Vanguard 500 Index fund for the 10 years from 2000 to 2010 the good news is that your expenses were low, the bad news is that you lost money. For comparison, one of the biggest actively managed funds with expenses that are nearly 10 times higher than Vanguard's index fund - Growth Fund of America - made 13%. The truth is that in Bull markets, index funds do well partly by definition. Laggards are dropped from the index and indexes are weighted toward the largest market capitalizations. It's when markets fluctuate or go down that having active management becomes important.
This is reminiscent of a dealer at the casino arguing that his craps table will be a good deal tonight because one guy tripled his money last night. There are hundreds of actively-managed mutual funds out there. Obviously, with the advantage of hindsight you'll be able to point to examples of funds that did better than average. The question is whether there's a reliable way to identify such funds in advance.

There have been numerous studies comparing index funds to actively-managed ones, and they almost always reach the same conclusion: index funds consistently beat the average actively managed fund. This is for a simple reason: it's hard to consistently beat the market, but it's easy to waste money trying to do so.

But even if the average actively managed fund performs poorly, isn't it possible to find an individual fund that will beat the market? The problem is that it's impossible to know if a manager's past performance was the result of skill or luck—and most of the time it's luck. People point to Warren Buffett as an example of a guy who was able to consistently beat the market for decades, but he's famous precisely because people like him are so rare. And it's much easier to identify such people at the end of a long career, when it's too late to do any good.

If you were trying to decide how to invest your money in 1980, buying shares in Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway would have been an option. Buffet had a couple of decades of solid performance under his belt and many people did invest with him. But Buffett was just one of many investors who had enjoyed above-average returns in the 1960s and 1970s. If you'd picked one of the other guys with Buffett-like results during the 1960s and 1970s, you almost certainly wouldn't have done as well in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s. Indeed, Buffett himself is a fan of index investing, betting in 2008 that an S&P 500 index fund could out-perform a collection of hedge funds over a 10-year period when fees are taken into account.

It's extremely difficult to identify, in advance, particular actively managed mutual funds that will consistently beat the market as a whole. But it's practically guaranteed that, on average, such funds will under-perform the market as a whole due to their high costs. So the smart investment strategy is to replicate the performance of the market as a whole at the lowest possible cost. And that means choosing passive money managers like the good folks at Vanguard.


Article from The Atlantic

Smart Investing Is Easier Than You Think


MAR 25 2012, 11:59 AM ET
Timothy B. Lee -- Writer with Ars Technica and the Cato Institute
Article from The Atlantic

Farhad Manjoo gives Slate readers advice on "how to stop investing your money like an idiot." He lucidly explains the principles of good investing, but then says that "for people who have extra money but not a lot of time or facility with investing, there has never been a simple way to invest in the rigorous, disciplined way that experts advise." Manjoo is far from the first writer to make this claim (and I'm kind of a broken record on the subject), but this isn't true. Vanguard has had funds that do exactly that since 2003, and they're significantly cheaper than the options Manjoo discusses in his article.

Manjoo reviews three options, and the one option Manjoo ultimately recommends, called Betterment, is pretty good. You tell Betterment how you want to allocate your money between relatively risky assets (like stocks) and relatively safe ones (like Treasury bonds). Betterment then automatically buys a mix of assets that fit your criteria and automatically adjusts them over time.

It's a great service, with one major weakness: the cost. Betterment itself charges between 0.15 percent and 0.35 percent of your money to help you decide which funds to buy, and the underlying funds Betterment buys, called ETFs, cost another 0.19 percent, on average. For example, if you invest $50,000 with Betterment, the annual costs will be around 0.44 percent, or about $220. That's pretty good. Many mutual funds have "expense ratios" around 1 percent, so you can save hundreds of dollars each year in fees--and end up with thousands of dollars more at retirement--by transferring your money from a higher-cost fund to Betterment.

But you can get an even better deal from Vanguard, long considered the lead in low-priced mutual funds. For example, my wife has her IRA invested in Vanguard's Target Retirement 2045 fund, which as the name suggests is for people planning to retire around 2045. Like Betterment, this fund buys a mix of stocks and bonds, automatically keeps its portfolio balanced, and gradually shifts to more conservative assets as you get closer to retirement. But for our hypothetical customer with $50,000 to invest, this fund costs less than half what Betterment does--0.19 percent, or about $95 per year. The $125 you save each year by switching from Betterment to Vanguard will really add up over the course of your career.

Vanguard has two big advantages that allow it to keep its costs much lower than its competitors. First, while most mutual funds are run by commercial firms that expect to earn a profit, Vanguard is owned by its customers. That means there are no conflict of interest between customers and shareholders--customers get every dime of Vanguard's "profits." Second, Vanguard's vast size--$1.8 trillion under management--allows them to take advantage of economies of scale.

I talked to Betterment CEO Jon Stein about how his service compares to Vanguard, and he didn't dispute that Vanguard has him beat on cost. But he argued that Betterment offers more sophisticated tools for fine-tuning your asset allocation. For example, saving for college or a new house might require a different asset allocation than saving for retirement. Vanguard may not offer a fund that meets the needs of these savers. Betterment also offers advanced portfolio customization features for users with more than $100,000 invested.

Stein also touted Betterment's for-profit structure as an advantage, noting that the most innovative companies in America tend to be for-profit firms, not cooperatives like Vanguard. But when it comes to retirement savings, it's not obvious that more innovation is better. After all, innovation typically costs money, and one way or another any money your mutual fund company spends is going to come out of your pocket.

So for the average consumer, smart retirement investing really is as simple as going here and clicking on the link corresponding to your expected retirement date. Betterment's fees are lower than most other mutual fund companies, so it's worth giving them a look if you need their "power user" features. But for most investors Betterment's premium features are overkill; you're better investing in Vanguard's more frugal funds and pocketing the difference.

And for the record, my only conflict of interest is that I'm a satisfied Vanguard customer.
 

Megan McArdleEGAN MCARDLE - Megan McArdle is a senior editor for The Atlantic who writes about business and economics. She has worked at three start-ups, a consulting firm, an investment bank, a disaster recovery firm at Ground Zero, and The Economist. She is currently on leave.



Article from The Atlantic

BMO Investments Inc. Announces Proposed Changes to its Mutual Fund Line-Up


March 23, 2012, 3:17 p.m. EDT
Article from The Marketwatch

TORONTO, ONTARIO, Mar 23, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- BMO Investments Inc. today announced proposed changes to the BMO Mutual Funds and the BMO Guardian Funds line-ups. The primary objective of these changes is to reduce duplicate fund offerings and streamline the product suite to provide more cost-effective investment solutions for investors.

Proposed Fund Mergers

Subject to obtaining all necessary securityholder and regulatory approvals, BMO Investments Inc. proposes that each Terminating Fund listed in the table below be merged into the corresponding Continuing Fund also listed below. If approved, the mergers will be effective in June 2012.

If the proposed mergers are approved, securityholders of each class or series of each Terminating Fund will receive securities of the equivalent class or series of the corresponding Continuing Fund, determined on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Securities of the Terminating Funds will no longer be offered for sale beginning May 24, 2012. The Terminating Funds will be wound up as soon as possible following the mergers.

Securityholder approval for the relevant funds will be sought at special meetings to be held on or about May 18, 2012. In advance of the meetings, full details of the proposed mergers will be set out in notices of meetings and management information circulars that will be sent to securityholders of record as at April 9, 2012. The notices of meetings and management information circulars will also available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com .

The Independent Review Committee of the funds listed above has reviewed the potential conflict of interest matters related to the proposed mergers and has provided BMO Investments Inc., the manager of the funds, with a positive recommendation for each merger after determining that each merger, if implemented, achieves a fair and reasonable result for the applicable funds.

Pre-Approved Fund Mergers

BMO Investments Inc. also announced today that the following two pre-approved mergers will be effective in June 2012.


Each of these mergers has received approval from the Independent Review Committee after determining that each merger, if implemented, achieves a fair and reasonable result for the applicable funds. As these mergers satisfy certain regulatory criteria, they are not subject to securityholder or regulatory approvals. However, securityholders of each of these Terminating Funds will receive written notice of these mergers at least 60 days prior to the effective date of each merger.

Securityholders of each series of each of these Terminating Funds will receive securities of the equivalent series of the applicable Continuing Fund, determined on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Securities of these Terminating Funds will no longer be offered for sale beginning May 24, 2012. These Terminating Funds will be wound up as soon as possible following the mergers.

BMO Investments Inc. encourages securityholders to contact their financial advisor to determine the solution that best meets their individual investment needs and circumstances.

About BMO Investments Inc.

BMO Investments Inc. is a member of BMO Financial Group and part of the organization's Private Client Group. The Private Client Group provides integrated wealth management services and had total assets under management and administration of $435 billion as at January 31, 2012.

     
        Contacts:
        For all news media enquiries please contact:
        Amanda Robinson, Toronto
        (416) 867-3996
        amanda.robinson@bmo.com
       
        Sarah Bensadoun, Montreal
        (514) 877-8224
        sarah.bensadoun@bmo.com
       
        Laurie Grant, Vancouver
        604-665-7596
        laurie.grant@bmo.com
       
        
SOURCE: BMO Financial Group and BMO Bank of Montreal

        mailto:amanda.robinson@bmo.com
        mailto:sarah.bensadoun@bmo.com
        mailto:laurie.grant@bmo.com
       
Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Article from The Marketwatch

When Wall Street's Bullish, Investors Head for the Exits


Published: Wednesday, 21 Mar 2012 | 2:17 PM ET Text Size 
By: Jeff Cox
CNBC.com Senior Writer
Article from CNBC


All of Wall Street's wildly bullish calls on stocks may be having just the opposite effect, driving wary mom-and-pop investors out of the market despite the long-standing rally.

After all, they've been down this road before: One big-name analyst after another advocates a buy, buy and buy some more strategy, only to see a bubble burst that ends up trapping late-to-the-game individual investors.

True to form, Wall Street's biggest investment houses have been marching to the podium with avid encouragement to put money to work.

Goldman Sachs' Peter Oppenheimer drew headlines Wednesday for releasing a note in which he says stocks are presenting a once-in-a-generation buying opportunity. Similarly, Bank of America and Credit Suisse recently have taken up their full-year projections for the Standard & Poor's 500 [.SPX  1402.89     -2.63  (-0.19%)   ]. JPMorgan Chase has remained strongly bullish, and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink several weeks ago said investors should have a total allocation to stocks.
 
The admonitions haven't worked among retail investors.

In just the last week alone investors pulled another $126 million out of stock-based mutual funds and shoveled $10.7 billion into bond mutual funds, according to the Investment Company Institute.

The total outflow from stock funds was comparatively small to recent weeks, but the move is significant in that U.S-based stock funds, despite a stunning gain of more than 30 percent off the October lows, lost nearly $1.4 billion.

"There's a feeling that another shoe is going to drop somewhere, and they don't want to be caught in a situation where they can't get out," says Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential Annuities in Newark, N.J. "What they don't want to get involved in is some trap that is being set by hedge funds or asset managers to get in so (the managers) can get out."

Retail investors can be forgiven for feeling a little shell-shocked.

They just survived a decade in which two major bubbles popped — the dotcom mania and the subprime mortgage frenzy — and they worry that the stock market now is being fueled again by easy money from the Federal Reserve  that ultimately will run out and leave them holding the bag.

"A lot of people are very skeptical. Look how wrong these guys were last year," says Kathy Boyle, president of Chapin Hill Advisors in New York. "The average individual is feeling there's a lot of propaganda going on."

Indeed, consensus forecasts in 2011 were looking for the S&P 500 to finish around 1,400 when in fact it registered an almost perfectly flat 1,257, a 10 percent miss.

Investors may have had a strong sense of deva vu — that was almost exactly where the index registered on Jan. 20, 1999.

"They suffered through everybody being bullish and telling them they could not lose at the top of the Internet bubble, then they suffered through everybody telling them you could not lose at the top of the financial bubble," says Walter Zimmerman, senior technical analyst at United-ICAP in Jersey City, N.J. "At this point, they're way past once-burned twice-cautious."

Of course, the retail reticence in the market is about more than not trusting Wall Street bullishness. But it certainly appears to be playing a role.

Zimmerman believes the depletion of U.S. savings accounts has made less money available for investors to put in the market.

Boyle, meanwhile, says mutual fund flows may not be painting an entirely correct picture about retail participation, given that many have flocked to exchange-traded funds   .

Yet U.S.-based mutual funds actually have attracted more assets even as the ETF field has bloomed to a $1.2 trillion industry. Mutual funds held $8.6 trillion in assets as of February, an increase from just under $8 trillion in 2011, according to Morningstar.

The rally, then, appears in large part to be driven by the high-frequency trading platforms that big investors use, as well as a burgeoning level of corporate stock buybacks.

Repurchases hit an 11-month high of $5.3 billion a day last week and have totaled $33.5 billion in March alone, with big banks that cleared the Fed stress tests the most active participants, according to TrimTabs.

So what will bring mom and pop back into the fold?

Prudential's Krosby thinks more consistent improvements in the economic data, along with a surge in dividend offerings and a better entry point that would come with a healthy correction could entice the retail investor.

"If we were to see a pullback, a consolidation, then you might see many of the investors come in, provided the economic data continue to remain solid," she says.

"What doesn't help is when you hear CEOs or asset managers saying, 'Start pushing all your money into equities.' They look at that as suspect," Krosby adds. "They see those comments as a marketing ploy to lure them in, and they're very suspect of headlines like that."

© 2012 CNBC.com

Article from CNBC