There is a
very good article out today on MarketWatch.com. "You are the best predictor of next bull or bear" The
title is misleading but the theme of the article is this: There is no
evidence that any person or any expert has any ability to predict mutual fund
returns or forecast the economy. Actually, an even better summary of the
article is in the affirmative: There IS significant evidence that traditional
performance metrics cannot reliably predict mutual fund performance and there
IS significant evidence that experts do a very poor job of predicting turning
points in the economy.
There is one
metric that can predict mutual fund performance which I will get back to in a moment,
but the things that cannot predict mutual fund performance, based on a 2004
study by the Financial Research Center titled "Predicting Mutual Fund
Performance II: After The Bear," include:
- Past performance
- Morningstar ratings
- Turnover
- Manager tenure
- Net sales
- Asset size
- Four risk-volatility measures
- Alpha
- Beta
- Standard deviation
- Sharpe ratio
Yes, you
read that correctly. Not even the coveted 5-Star Morningstar Rating can
reliable predict future performance. But there is hope. There is
one measure that can reliably predict mutual fund performance and that is the
expense ratio. That is right. Funds with low expense ratios
“deliver above-average future performance across nearly all time periods.”
Does this
make intuitive sense? Not if you are in the "Active Management"
camp. If successful active management is probable then there should be a
positive correlation between expense ratios and fund performance. Think
about it. If I am the best stock picker in the market I will charge you
more to benefit from my services. If I am not so good then I will have to
charge to less to entice you to pay me. The only way lower expenses can
correlate with better performance is if what you are paying for (Active
Management) does not actually provide additional value.
The article
also discusses economic forecasts and references Brandeis Prof. William
Sherden who tested the accuracy of leading forecasters over decades. His
research was published in “The Fortune Sellers: The Big Business of Buying and
Selling Predictions.” The conclusion he came to: “I see no way economic
forecasting can improve since it is trying to do the impossible.” He
found that nothing could reliably predict the future direction of the economy
and forecasts were no better than a random guess. Read the article for
more detail on 10 findings of the professor's research.
At the end,
the article does not come right out and say it (they are in the business of
selling active investing advice after all) but the conclusion should be that a
globally diversified efficient portfolio based on asset allocation and your
risk profile is your best opportunity at having long term investing success.
If you are a
die hard market timer or stock picker you may still have reservations with the
information in this article and have trouble accepting the growing pile of
academic evidence against you. But we should all be able to agree
on one thing: There is substantial evidence that picking outperforming
mutual funds or predicting the economy is nearly impossible. If some one
does have the ability to consistently do either of these they would have a very
scarce and highly valuable skill. So if you feel you are the exception to
the rule or your financial advisor tells you that he/she is the exception to
the rule then ask yourself these questions:
"Why is
my financial advisor not a billionaire or charge me even more? He has one of
the rarest skills on Earth."
or
"Why
don't I quite my day job? Hedge funds will pay me millions of dollars a
year for this skill"
I think we
all know the answer to these questions. It may just take a little
introspective thought and honest evaluation to bring them to the surface.
Very well explained about mutual fund investments! Thanks for the information. Awaiting for more useful information!
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