Tuesday, September 4, 2012

August 2012 Performance

  

 The Moron has already mentioned how silly and pointless it is to track short-term performance. So
if that applies to our year-to-date performance, how would one describe the practice of tracking performance for a single month? We can't even say with confidence whether 2012 will be an up or down year for our funds or the market  -- any inferences drawn from the performance in August alone are likely to be bad ones.

    Nonetheless, we just can't help ourselves. Poring over results in good months and ignoring them in bad months is one of MFM's coping strategies. So, we'll try not to make a habit of it, but here goes a look at the top and bottom quintiles for last month.

Top Quintile

1. Fairholme                                    + 8.08%
2. Ariel                                                5.38
3. Bridgeway Agressive                      4.51
4. Royce Special Equity                      4.26
5. Templeton Growth                          3.80
6. T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth     3.66


Bottom Quintile

25. Yacktman                                 + 2.06%
26. Third Avenue Value                    2.00
27. Janus Contrarian                          1.86
28. Vanguard Div. Appreciation       1.82
29. FMI Large Cap                            1.54
30. Franklin Income                            .99

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Ten Year Numbers

    MFM has already mentioned how silly it is to track short term results, although we do it anyway, but it's hard to argue against the significance of a decade's worth of performance numbers.

    The numbers below are 10 year results through August 28, 2012. Nothing special about that date, it's just when the moron got around to compiling these results. The cut line 10 years ago is a pretty bizarre one. Ten years ago we were in the final several months of the debacle that was 2002. Therefore, these results all exclude the big gains of the late 90s as well as the big declines of 2000, 2001, and 2002 through very late August.

    From today until next March, one can take it to the bank that the annualized 10-year numbers for all of these funds will increase significantly. That is because poor performance days, weeks and months are falling off of the back end of the sample period. Looked at another way, we can say that current prices will be compared to starting prices that will be lower and lower.

    Fund companies wishing to tout high 10-year returns will be well-advised to wait until March 2013 to do so.

    Two of the MFM30, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation and Wasatch Heritage Growth, do not have 10-year track records, and are thus not included below. That leaves us with 28 funds. Therefore, instead of dividing the funds into quintiles, we will divide them into four quartiles of seven funds each. Following each fund name is its annualized percentage gain over the 10-year period.

Top Quartile


1. T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth (PRMGX) 11.1%

    The Champ! What's not to like here? Outstanding fund company, the same manager and strategy since 1992, low fees, above average in its category for 9 of the past 10 calendar years, not once in the bottom quartile in those years. Closed to new investors is MFM's understanding, but the fine print on that is confusing.

2. Yacktman (YACKX)  10.71%

    The subject of our most recent post. Has won largely by playing defense and being patient. Not only super results, but excellent protection of capital.

3. Perkins Mid-Cap Value (JMCVX) 9.67%

    Has the J in its ticker symbol because it used to be called Janus Mid-Cap Value. Another fund that has shown superior relative performance in down markets. Very consistent performer. One of the Moron's favorites.

4. Dodge and Cox International (DODFX) 9.58%

    Certainly as good a choice as any for an international fund. Consistent, disciplined strategy. Very low fees, a team approach, from a company with old fashioned values.  Founded in 1930, Dodge and Cox only has 5 funds and they do not advertise. This performance includes a loss of over 50% from late 2007 to early 2009. Nothing fancy here, but solid.

5. Fairholme (FAIRX)  9.53%

    The only important question here is: Does Bruce Berkowitz know what he's doing? MFM thinks he does. There is still no cure for premature accumulation though, and Bruce's intelligence level will continue to fluctuate greatly from year to year. Investors here will be well advised to either understand their investment thoroughly, or just to go away and come back in 15 - 20 years.

6. Kinetics Paradigm (WWNPX) 9.30%

    Outrageously high fees. Suspect strategy. Held up well in 2002, but got absolutely hammered in 2008 -- down over 53% in that calendar year alone. Still, for the moment anyway, the 10 year results are very strong. It's quite unlikely that such out-performance was due to luck alone, especially when one considers the abusive fees that the fund had to overcome to achieve it. MFM would love to dump this one from the MFM30, but its out-performance persists. Very strong year-to-date results.

7. FMI Large Cap (FMIHX) 9.28%

    Only 29 stocks (topped by 3M, Walmart, and Berkshire Hathaway) and a turnover of 28%. Holds 11% cash and some foreign stocks. Not overly huge at $6 billion. Fund reports are way above average, and demonstrate a concern for the macro-economics as well as bottom up stock picking. MFM feels like these people can be trusted.

   

 

Second Quartile

8. Fidelity Contra (FCNTX)   9.26%

    With assets over $84 billion there is no possible way this fund can do what it has done, but it keeps on doing it and we keep holding on. Big positions in Apple, Google, Coca-Cola, and Berkshire Hathaway. This has become, de facto, Fidelity's flagship fund. At one time the monicker "Contra" was supposed to mean something about the strategy followed. Now it's just a name. It's a stock fund. And right now, despite its size, it's a good one.

9. Royce Special Equity (RYSEX)  9.23%

    Gotta love a fund with SEX in its ticker symbol. Truly managed to not lose money, the manager is a real nerd about reading financial reports and deciding whether they should be classified as "fiction" or "non-fiction". The exercise has proved valuable. "only" lost a bit less than 20% in 2008. Closed to new investors as of February of this year. An easy fund to hold on to.

10. FPA Crescent Fund (FPACX)  9.19%

    Maybe it's quirky. Maybe it's eccentric. Steven Romnick's goal is to provide equity-like returns with less risk than the overall stock market. So far he's been quite successful at doing so. Holds quarterly reviews in which he takes questions from investors. It's especially fun to hold this one when the overall market heads south.

11. Franklin Income (FKINX) 8.64%

    This asset-allocation offering has been around forever, and it is good at what it does. Franklin-Templeton is actually a great company, and they may be especially strong on the bond side. A yield of over 6% (!!!) comes from a combination of bonds and dividend-paying stocks. Although returns over the past decade have surely been bolstered by falling interest rates, the Moron believes that this fund can keep regressing to a mean of  7 or 8% per annum. Generally a Steady Eddie, but we had a little drama a few years ago, when the fund was down 30% in 2008 and up 35% in 2009. Management fee is very reasonable at .63%, but there's certainly no reason to pay a 4.25% load to get in. An absolute behemoth at over $63 Billion.

12. Janus Contrarian (JSVAX) 8.49%

    Can't really draw any conclusions from the ten-year numbers. Old manager had a superior record, then crashed and burned in 2008 and left without so much as a goodbye. New manager has adopted a more conservative strategy. He has done okay so far, but the jury is still out. Janus is not one of the best fund companies in MFM's opinion. Investors are justified in feeling used and abused when a manager, who should have a fiduciary relationship with them, loses big and then runs away.

13. Osterwies (OSTFX) 8.42%

    A plain old stock picker's fund. Concentrated at just 33 stocks. Morningstar classifies it as "Mid-Cap Blend". Still a less than a billion dollars in its coffers, but just a little less. Relatively speaking, it has help up well in bear markets. For example, it was "only" down 12% in 2002 and 29% in 2008. But the long term numbers speak for themselves. Over the past 15 years, the annualized return is + 9.77%.

14. Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth (FRSGX) 8.41%

    This one can really fly in bull markets and can really get slaughtered in bear markets. If you're looking for action, you will find it here. Has been through some changes over the years, and had even changed its name. it used tro be called Franklin Small Cap Growth, but when it was flying high in the late 90's it grew rather portly and had to move up the capitalization ladder to put the money to work. One thing that has not changed is the manager. If we can just avoid those pesky downturns, this one will shine. Otherwise.....maybe not so much.



THIRD QUARTILE

15. Oakmark Equity Income (OAKBX) 8.20%

    Manager has the ability to shift the concentration of stocks vs. bonds within wide parameters. recently, he has skewed towards dividend paying stocks as the best way to play defense. Remarkably smooth ride here.

16. T. Rowe Price Spectrum Growth (PRSGX) 8.1%

    This fund of funds is organized in such a way that one does not pay double management fees, but rather pays the very reasonable fees that Price funds are known for. Guaranteed never to be the best or the worst growth fund. So far human input has managed to add to growth index returns. Probably will be able to do so in the future. Probably.

17. (tie) Columbia Value and Restructuring (UMBIX) 7.82%

    Long time manager recently retired. What we have here at present is a portfolio of very high quality growth stocks. Lost 47% in 2008.

17. (tie) Mairs and Power Growth (MPGFX) 7.82%

    45 holdings when last reported. Highest quality names with an emphasis on companies operating in the Minneapolis area. Conservative and patient with a low management fee. Should (!) hold up better than most growth funds in bear markets.

19. Litman Gregory Masters International (MSILX) 7.80%

    Fund is divided among 6 subadvisors each running separate portfolios. Again, guaranteed never to be the best or the worst international fund. So far has beaten its peers fairly consistently. Great choice for international exposure.

20. (tie) Third Avenue Value (TAVFX) 7.22%

    It's been a wild ride, and the past decade has not been one of the best. The Moron believes the risk is quite limited when holding for 5 years or more. A great diversifier because management analyzes companies from an entirely different perspective from most managers, emphasizing a school of analysis they refer to as "Fundamental Finance".

20. (tie) Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (VTSMX) 7.22%

    The Great Dividing Line in our list. This fund represents par for the course of investing in U.S. equities. A market cap weighted index fund representing the entire U.S. market. Expense ratio is as close to zero as Vanguard can get it, recently .05% (!!!) Buy and hold this one and you will get what the market is willing to give you -- no more and only slightly less.



FOURTH QUARTILE

22. Sequoia (SEQUX) 6.60%

    The Moron is surprised to find this one trailing VTSMX. For all their celebrated stock picking, over the past decade at least, the index wins. Still a great choice for an equity fund. A concentrated portfolio and managers who are among the best.

23. Franklin Balance Sheet (FRBSX) 6.44%

    The Moron is surprised to see this one only slightly trailing the mighty and highly touted Sequoia Fund. Has had the same manager since its inception in 1990. Probably fair to call this an average fund that has held up at least somewhat better than average in bear markets. Long term record is certainly acceptable. Has in fact beaten VTSMX by over 2 full percentage points, annualized, when measured over a 15 year period.

24. Mutual Shares (MUTHX) 6.38%

    Designed to hold up well in down drafts, it has usually succeeded in doing so. It did not do so in 2008, doing a little worse than average. Still, the downside capture ratio measured over 15 years is 70%. Not bad. May continue to lag the overall return of the market as it has over the past decade, but as a true value fund, the results should continue to be acceptable and the ride a little smoother.

25. Ariel (ARGFX) 5.69%

    Disappointing. In recent years, returns have been characterized by huge swings up and down. Not in character with the "slow and steady" slogan. From peak to trough lost nearly 70% from late 2007 to early 2009. Then it took off like a riot. So what did we get for our pains? About 1.5% less annualized than the total stock market index fund.

26. Bridgeway Aggressive Growth (BRAGX) 5.68%

    It's in for a dime, in for a dollar with this one. Hold on for a long, long, long time, and one just might win. Was brutally dismantled in the bear market of 2008. However its 15 year record still sparkles and shines. Certainly not for the faint of heart or the impatient. The one "Quant" fund on our list. Investing decisions here are made by computers according to proprietary formulas. In recent years, the fund has actually sported a negative management fee. (Just like our "Ideal Mutual Fund"). In other words management is actually putting extra money into the fund. This is by agreement, and in response to poor performance in recent years.

27. Jenson Quality Growth (JENSX) 6.62%

    As the name says, invests in only the highest quality companies. Over time, investors should do fine here. However, the Moron sees no evidence that this fund will outperform an index of quality companies such as VDAIX. For that reason, will probably be dropped from the MFM30 soon.

28. Templeton Growth (TEPLX) 5.03%

    Somebody had to be last, and it's sad that it had to be this venerable fund, of which the Moron will have much more to say later. Founded in 1954 by the legendary John Templeton, this was his firm's flagship fund. The Moron suspects that managers strayed from Sir John's principles in recent years, but now believes the fund is in better hands and back on track.


  

   








Saturday, August 25, 2012

Yacktman Speaks!

    Excellent Q&A with Donald Yacktman at gurufocus.com

    Yacktman Fund is at the the bottom of The MFM30 in alphabetical order, but way closer to the top in the Moron's affections.

    It's certainly not even vaguely amusing as a joke anymore because it's been overused so regularly, but as Consuelo Mack has pointed out, Yacktman is one of the few who follows the two cardinal rules of investing.

1. Don't lose money.

and

2. Never forget Rule #1.

    While in recent years, Yacktman has favored high quality, mostly dividend paying companies, it's not because he is married to the idea of quality at any price. He holds quality companies now because he believes that the market is offering them at compelling prices. The Moron wholeheartedly agrees with this assessment.

    Further, the Moron appreciates that Mr. Yacktman also understands that dividends in and of themselves are relatively unimportant, except as to the tax consequences. It is not the dividends, but the ability to pay dividends that matters - free cash flow. The company may choose to pay dividends, buy back stock, pay down debt, or just hold cash. It's that one other use of cash that Yacktman call "the wild card"  -- that is when the company reinvests in itself. That reinvestment may turn out to be spectacularly profitable,  or it might turn out to be a total destruction of capital, as in the process that Peter Lynch called "di-worse-ification".

A few high points:

  • Yacktman says a goal is to achieve "approximately double digit annualized returns." It's rare and refreshing to hear a manager be so specific. MFM will conservatively estimate this to mean returns of 8 -12 % annualized.

  • "If you buy an above average business at below average prices, then on average, it's going to work out." Hey, then you could be ABOVE AVERAGE!

  • "I can't overemphasize the importance of patience."

  • "No manager performs well in all environments." MFM is going to add that one to our list of potential mutual fund advertising slogans :)

  • "We believe investors would be well served not to track us versus a benchmark over shorter time periods." Yea, probably true, but we just can't help ourselves.

  • "What I don't understand is why anybody in their right mind would want to own a 30-year treasury today." MFM doesn't understand it either, Mr. Yacktman.
Here's the link:
http://www.gurufocus.com/news/187901/donald-yacktman-interview-with-gurufocus

Donald Yacktman







Tuesday, August 21, 2012

The Golden Age of Mutual Funds




This has got to truly be the Golden Age of Mutual Funds. As opposed to the original Golden Age, a period of "primordial peace, harmony, stability, and prosperity" from which we have fallen, this Golden Age is one to which we have arrived. One key thing makes it a Golden Age: access to information.


    Prospectuses and fund materials are available instantly. Vast reems of statistics : ditto. Financial articles and blogs. Even MUTUAL FUND MORON.

     Fund managers no longer need be shadowy, anonymous figures. Interviews are on youtube, websites, and even on that 20th century device the television. Information, education, discussion, statistics......more, more, more and more. Further, the rise of indexing and numerous academic studies have given us more a scientific understanding of fund composition and performance than ever before.

                                         


    Quotes for the day's activity can all be had right around 6:00 ET, two hours after the market close. In fact, one can pull up the most recent announceed portfolio of a given fund and track the market prices of the positions throughout the trading day. It's not hard or time-consuming to make a fairly accurate prediction of how a fund has done on a given day even before the market closes.

    This is not even to mention closed end funds or ETFs. (The Moron, being a creature of the 20th Century pretty much does without them.)

    So will the average person have better results due to all of this? Probably not.

   Ignorance, fear, greed, stupidity, exploitation of the naive by financial predators  -- overall,  these  easily cancel out the positives. For the many, and for the average person. 

    Further, many knowledgable people believe we may be in for a period of diminished returns from the market in general. MFM is not smart enough to know, but of course none of our Golden Age wonders could  make up for a weak stock market.





Thoughts on Marty Whitman Interview - Part 2



  It might be wondered why MFM has dredged up an old 5 minute interview from 4 years ago to present here. It's because MFM believes it encapsulates so many important lessons about mutual fund investing. That's true both objectively, in the information presented, but probably more importantly in being able to observe Marty's demeanor and attitude in response to sharp market declines.

    As has already been observed, if anyone knows what he is doing in managing a mutual fund, Marty Whitman does. In this interview, while MFM believes he is thoughtful, humble, serious, and charming, he also displays a powerful sense of true confidence. He is unapologetic about very sharp declines over the past year. Marty's confidence is certainly not bravado or bluster, but the kind of confidence that results from competence and knowledge.

    His "We just do 3 things" and "All we ever strive to do" may be  prepared talking points, but they are good ones, and very revealing. His focus is on the incredible values  available  -- not on recent declines in market price.

    As for Marty's theory that "....it's going to be pretty hard to have 2 bad years in a row"-- we can now look back and put it to test, in this instance anyway:

 How did the fund do in the following calandar year?

 It was up by 44.51%!



   

Friday, August 17, 2012

Thoughts on Marty Whitman's 2008 Inverview - Part 1

    The interview in the previous post was conducted at the end of 2008. Russell was being very kind when he mentioned that "last year, you lost a fair amount of money." For the calander year 2008, Third Avenue Value Fund declined by 45.61%.

    It gets worse. The fund also declined sharply in the last few months of 2007. The declines then continued until March 6, 2009. Culminating in a loss of over 12% for February 2009 alone. MFM did a little research, got the figures, took into consideration distributions, and here's what he found. From a peak per share price of $67.78 on October12, 2007 to a trough price of $25.45 on March 6, 2009, Third Avenue Value Fund declined by 61.15%.

    A $10,000 investment would have declined to about $3,885 in the space of about 16 months. This is in a fund run by a man who really knows what he is doing, a man who can even be considered legendary. This is in a fund with "Value" in its name, a fund which has a slogan "cheap but safe", and fund that, in Marty's words buys in "at huge discounts to readily ascertainable net asset value."
 
    Marty's response: "Well, ... the strategy never works consistently." Important lesson. Quite true, but MFM doesn't think it would look too good in promotional literature or as an advertising slogan. Can you imagine?

                     "Third Avenue Funds. Our Strategy Never Works Consistently."


   But Marty is just being honest. And notice how he accepts the decline with equanimity. His focus is on the performance of the underlying companies, not on market pricing which he judges to be irrational. He feels like he will be okay since his companies have experienced almost no "permanant impairments of capital."



   

Marty Whitman -- Not A Moron

Marty Whitman is most definitely NOT a moron. He is the founder was and long-time manager of  Third Avenue Value Fund, one of the funds on the MFM30 list. In this brief interview, he makes a lot of excellent points, which are very useful in learning how to think proftably about mutual funds.


<iframe src="http://quicktake.morningstar.com/widget/VideoPlayer.aspx?vid=293646" height="362px" width="473px"  frameborder="0"> </iframe>

All About Morons

Moron Mug


    According to Wikipedia, the term "moron" was coined in 1910 by psychologist Henry H. Goddard, from the Ancient Greek word "moros" which means "dull".

     Since "oxy" means sharp, an oxymoron, a contradiction in terms, literally translates as "sharp-dull". MFM would never have suspected a linguistic link between moron and oxymoron, but there it is.

    So what makes MFM a moron?  Well, he has never studied business or accounting. He doesn't know how to read a balance sheet. He has no idea how to accurately value a business. He is unable to forecast the direction of the financial markets, of interest rates, or of the economy in general. He simply has no idea. There seem to be too many variables, so he is just confused.

    Like our old friend the Scarecrow he remembers that "People without brains do an awful lot of  talking."


                                        



    On a positive note, as a moron, MFM is considered to be one degree more intelligent than an Imbecile and two degrees more intelligent than an Idiot. So at least  he's smarter tha all the imbeciles and idiots out there, and there sure are a lot of them.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Year to Date Performance

All of the 30 funds on the list have a positive performance year-to-date through 8/14/2012. The following are the top six and bottom 6 performers for the year so far, listed by their numerical rank and the percentage increase in market price.

A couple of questions:

1. You've got growth funds in with value funds in with balanced funds in with international funds. Isn't this like comparing apples and oranges???

Yes.

2. Since mutual funds are a long-term investment, isn't the practice of following and comparing short term performance essentially meaningless, inane, and potentially misleading???

Yes.

Okay!!! here are the results.


Top 6

1. Fairholme                            27.17%


2. Third Ave. Value                16.72


3. Bridgeway Agressive          14.33


4. Mairs and Power Growth    14.30


5. Kinetics Paradigm               13.89


6. Fidelity Contrafund             13.18


Bottom 6

30. Litman Gregory International        5.80%


29. Franklin Balance Sheet                  5.84


28. Oakmark Equity and Income         5.99


27. FPA Crescent                                 6.30


26. Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth   6.33


25. Perkins Mid-Cap Value                 6.39




(All performance data is from Morningstar.)

The List

    The following is a list of 30 mutual funds that we follow. This is not a list of the funds that we think are the "best".  Funds are on this list for various reasons. Some have been owned by the moron for decades, some are owned by family members, some are funds he likes but does not own, some are here as useful benchmarks.

    The list is heavily slanted towards U.S. equity funds.  These are the funds the Moron understands best and prefers. The great majority of these funds has a performance over the past 10-15 years that is ABOVE AVERAGE.  Over time, the Moron hopes to analyze each fund here individually.

    Funds may be added or deleted over time at the sole discretion of the MFM.

    One more time: This is NOT a list of funds that MFM claims will "beat the market" or will have above average performance in the future. MFM may produce such a list in the future, but this is not it.

    Without further ado, here, in alphabetical order, are the 30 funds:


Ariel   (ARGFX)

Bridgeway Aggressive Growth   (BRAGX)

Columbia Value and Restructuring  (UMBIX)

Dodge and Cox International  (DODGX)

Fairholme  (FAIRX)

Fidelity Contrafund  (FCNTX)

FMI Large Cap  (FMIHX)

FPA Crescent  (FPACX)

Franklin Balance Sheet  (FRBSX)

Franklin Income   (FKINX)

Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth   (FRSGX)

Janus Contrarian  (JSVAX)

Jenson Quality Growth   (JENSX)

Kinetics Paradigm   (WWNPX)

Litman Gregory Masters International  (MSILX)

Mairs and Power Growth   (MPGFX)

Mutual Shares   (MUTHX)

Oakmark Equity and Income   (OAKBX)

Osterweis   (OSTFX)

Perkins Mid-Cap Value  (JMCVX)

Royce Special Equity  (RYSEX)

Sequoia   (SEQUX)

T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth  (RPMGX)

T. Rowe Price Spectrum Growth  (PRSGX)

Templeton Growth   (TEPLX)

Third Avenue Value   (TAVFX)

Vanguard Dividend Appreciation  (VDAIX)

Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (VTSMX)

Wasatch Heritage Growth   (WAHGX)

Yacktman  (YACKX)



Monday, August 13, 2012

The Ideal Mutual Fund

Welcome to the Mutual Fund Moron. I have a few words to say first about the ideal mutual fund:

    The ideal mutual fund will go up when the market goes up, and of course it will go up even more than the market. When the market goes down, this fund will still go up. It will outperform the market consistently, in any measurable period  -- short, medium, or long-term. The value of the fund will increase consistently, year after year after year. Never will it decline, even a little, even in the most brutal of bear markets.

    The fund will be run as an eleemosynary activity and will actually have a negative management fee, which will add appreciably to already sky-high returns.

    A relatively small investment in this fund will make one independently wealthy in just a few years.

    Fund reports will be interesting, informative and entertaining. They will be delivered quarterly, personally, by the fund manager herself. Yes, this fund will be run by a beautiful female. There in the privacy of one's own home, she will discuss fund results and answer questions. It will also turn out that she works as a swimsuit model as well as an investment manager. In fact, she will be wearing one of her favorite bikinis when she delivers the quarterly reports. It will quickly become clear that she knows many ways to make a fund investor happy.

    She will also be a gourmet cook! Soon, the fund investor's life will be an endless chain of eating delicious meals, checking the ever-increasing value of his investment, and spending quality time with the fund manager.

    Dear Readers! If you find such a fund, please inform me at once.

Our Fund Manager


......................................All except for that part about the bikini model and all that. (The Mutual Fund Moron is a happily married man.)