| Even
Enhanced Index Funds Trail the Market
By Will McClatchy
March 30, 1999 |
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Enhanced index funds should be in the best position to at least
modestly outperform index funds. All a fund manager has to do
is stick to the majority of stocks in an index and then overweight
a small number to try to eke out enhanced returns. And in principle
this should keep the risk profile of the resulting portfolio similar
to the underlying index.
In practice it is not so easy. According to Morningstar Inc.,
over the last 3 years enhanced funds have trailed their targeted
indexes by about 2.5% annually over the last 3 years.
High management fees appears to be a major factor. In an article
in the Wall St. Journal on Friday, March 26, on the subject, a
financial planner who studied enhanced funds was quoted as saying
that at 1.1% management fees for enhanced index funds are twice
that of regular index funds at .54%. (See www.wsj.com,
which requires a fee to view).
Many of the funds track the S&P 500 as their core target. The
continued strength of the largest firms in this index has befuddled
many investment analysts in recent years.