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Picking The Right
Mutual Fund
By Ginita
Wall, CPA, CFP
Your e-mails tell me time and again that one
of the most daunting tasks you face is picking mutual funds and monitoring their progress.
Im so busy, you say how can I make this task easier and less overwhelming?
People often take a hodgepodge approach to
their investments even those who read the financial magazines and reports and keep
up with the latest performance of mutual funds, and thus consider themselves astute
investors. They often invest in the hottest-performing mutual funds without first
reviewing their goals to determine their time horizon.
Their approach is bass-akward, like driving
by looking in your rear-view mirror rather than ahead. They load up on sectors that have
been in favor in the past, but will be old news in the future. And next year they do the
same. In the end, their investment portfolio looks as though it were put together by the
man who jumped on his horse and rode madly off in all directions.
Asset allocation
Asset allocation how to divide your
money among the different types of funds is the most important investment decision
youll make.
Studies show that 92% of your investment
return depends on the way in which you allocate your money among the different types of
funds, and only 8% of your success depends on the actual funds in which you invest.
In other words, once you decide the
percentage of your money that is going to go into each type of fund, you could use a
dartboard to pick the particular funds without affecting your return much. (I
wouldnt recommend the dartboard approach, though. Its smart to be as careful
in picking the funds as you are in allocating your assets.)
There are lots of sites on the Internet where
you can enter your information and create an asset allocation that works for you.
One of my favorites, because it is so simple
and easy to modify, is the asset
allocator at SmartMoney.com. You enter the holdings you have now, by category, move a
few indicators along a graph line to represent your future (how long until retirement,
your economic outlook, etc), and it shows you the ideal allocation for you and the
modifications you should make to your portfolio.
Picking the right funds
Once youve decided on the asset
allocation for you, its time to pick the funds themselves. Diversification is
important, not only among different mutual fund categories, such as stock funds, bond
funds, and money market funds, but within those categories as well.
Your mix of mutual funds should include
diversifying across types of funds (money market, equities, and bonds), across time
horizons (short-term, intermediate, and long-term bond funds), across industries
(telecommunications, health care, manufacturing, food, etc.) and across bond quality
(government, corporate, municipal, and high-yield.)
You can increase your diversification among
industries as well. If you buy a maximum growth fund that invests heavily in one industry,
such as technology, consider investing in another fund that invests less in technology and
more in old economy companies.
If you are investing $10,000 or less,
choose just one fund in each of the asset allocation categories. If you are investing more
than that, you may choose an additional fund or two in each category, though it really
isnt necessary. It is not important to hold a number of different funds in each
category, as it would be if you were holding individual stocks.
Investing in two funds that are similar will
not diminish risk. Its true that diversification among types of funds decreases
risk, but this is true only if the portfolio has diverse components, and investing in two
funds of similar type does not produce this diversity.
The SmartMoney site is a good source for
information on the performance of particular funds. I also like
Morningstar.com, one of
the most respected reporting services on mutual funds. They have loads of information on
every fund, and allow you to x-ray your funds to see where the overlaps are.
Sticking to your guns
Some investors buy the hot performers each
year, but never sell any of their prior fund investments. After several years, they have a
complicated mishmash of overlapping funds that are difficult to monitor. Some are
performing well, and some enjoyed only a brief time in the spotlight before they faded.
These investors own funds just as some people eat berries: they begin by choosing only the
best in the box, but they end up eating everything.
To keep this from happening to you, here are
some rules to follow:
- Stock to your asset allocation. If you
find a new fund you want to buy, make sure it fits your portfolios objectives.
- Limit the number of funds you own. That
way, you will be forced to week out the poor performers before you invest in a new fund.
- Dont let your investments overwhelm
you. If you find you own more fund sthan you can handle, combine your investments in
similar funds until you have weeded your investment garden to a manageable few funds.
Investing with one mutual fund family or
brokerage
Consider keeping your money all in the family
or at least in a family or two. You dont need to worry that your funds
wont be diversified within a single family.
The twenty largest fund families offer a
combined total of over one thousand different mutual funds. Large no-load and low-load
families include Dreyfus, Fidelity, Gabelli, Janus, T. Rowe Price, Scudder, American
Twentieth Century and Vanguard.
When choosing a family of funds, concentrate
on selection, performance and service, not the safety of your money. Even if the
funds sponsor has financial difficulty, your money wont disappear, because the
fund assets are insulated from claims of the sponsors creditors. Nor can the fund
manager run off with your money: all officers with access to money are covered by fidelity
bond coverage. And the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), which is much
like the FDIC for banks, guarantees that your mutual fund shares will be safe even if a
brokerage firm holding them for you goes bankrupt.
There are many advantages for investing in a
single family of funds. Your transaction statements will be in a consistent format, and
some funds even combine your funds onto a singly account statement. You will be able to
switch money from fund to fund with ease as your investment needs change. And if you are
investing in funds that charge a load, the loan may be reduced if you invest a certain
amount within the same family of funds.
If you want to invest in funds in several
different families, consider using a mutual fund supermarket or brokerage such as Schwab,
TD Waterhouse or Fidelity USA to do so. You can purchase a variety funds through these
companies at little or no cost.
If you want the simplicity of investing in
just one mutual fund, you might want to try an asset allocation fund that invests your
money in a variety of different assets within the same fund.
Examples of such funds are Vanguard Asset
Allocation and Fidelity Asset Manager. You may also consider target funds, such as the
Fidelity Freedom series, which target particular dates.
For example, Fidelity Freedom 2010 assumes
youll need to withdraw your money in the year 2010, and so the manager will be more
conservative in the investments he makes as that date approaches. These funds would be
ideal for investing for a childs education, where the money will be needed when the
child enters college.
about the
author: Ginita Wall
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