| FRC Study Confirms Investors Chase Fund Returns
to Their Detriment
By John Spence
January 18, 2001 |
|
Bad news from Financial Research Corporation: fund investors
chase returns like a mule with a carrot dangling in front of its
nose - and it's hurting them in the long run.
"Our research shows that accelerating redemption rates and
declining holding periods are entrenched problems that have been
worsening for more than a decade," says Gavin Quill, Director
of Research Studies at Financial
Research Corporation (FRC) and author of the study. "It
will take a concerted effort by financial professionals and individual
investors alike to reverse this disturbing trend and to undo its
detrimental affects on the long-term financial health of the investing
public."
In a study commissioned by Phoenix
Investment Partners, FRC found that mutual fund investors
had 20% lower returns, on average, over 3-year periods during
the last decade. In particular, FRC noted that from January 1990
through March 2000, the average fund's 3-year return was 10.92%,
while the actual return to investors was 8.7%.
Somewhere along the line, the creed for many mutual fund investors
in the 1990s became, "Buy high, sell low."
Investors have also been redeeming funds at a faster clip lately
- the average holding time period for a mutual fund is currently
2.9 years, compared to 5.5 years four years ago in 1996. Essentially,
holding periods have decreased as the markets have gone up.
| Date |
3/31/96 |
3/31/97 |
3/31/98 |
3/31/99 |
3/31/00 |
| Implied holding period
(years)* |
5.5 |
5.0 |
4.8 |
3.6 |
2.9 |
*
Implied holding periods are based on redemption rates. For example,
if an investor has a 25% redemption rate, a quarter of assets are
redeemed each year, and over a four-year period all assets will
be liquidated.
Source: Financial Research Corporation
And there was more bad news for individual "do-it-yourself"
investors. When FRC examined the data, it found that funds sold
through an investment advisor had less redemption than funds directly
marketed to individual investors. According to FRC, fund redemption
for individual self-directed investors averaged 18% in 1996 and
moved up to 30.5% in 2000. Redemption rates for investors who
purchased "wholesale" funds through advisors was 13.8%
in 1996 and 25.4% in 2000. Phoenix Investment Partners interpreted
the widening redemption gap to mean that investors with advisors
are better coached to ignore market fluctuations and stick to
their long-term investment plans.
Additionally, FRC found that investors truly do chase hot-performing
funds and sectors - and usually jump on the bandwagon after funds
have peaked. Over the 1990s, FRC concluded that, on average, $91
billion in new cash flowed into funds after they experienced their
best-performing quarters. Conversely, $6.5 billion in new cash
went into funds after they had their worst-performing quarters.
FRC examined performance chasing - which it defined as higher
net flows into mutual funds after their best-performing quarters
- in 48 Morningstar categories, and found it to be the case in
42.
This evidence lends credence to a common phenomenon in the investing
world: fund has record-breaking year/quarter, media attention
and advertising hypes fund, fund manager speaks on CNBC, cash
flows into fund, fund returns to earth leaving most of its new
investors holding the bag.
"The moral of the study is that investors who make investment
decisions based on emotion, not logic, in pursuit of big stock
market gains, are more likely to lose out in the long run,"
said Jack Sharry, President of Phoenix Investment Partners' Private
Client Group.