| Despite Legal
Setbacks, 2001 Another Strong Year for Vanguard
By John Spence
January 31, 2001 |
|
Vanguard fund assets under management jumped from $564 billion
to $581 billion in 2001, an increase of 3%. According to Financial
Research Corporation, total assets for the mutual fund industry
dropped from $4.3 trillion to $4.1 trillion, a loss of about 3%.
Several of the top-selling mutual funds in 2001 had Vanguard in
their names, as shown below.
| We're here for you |
| Vanguard Fund |
2001 inflows |
Industry rank |
| Vanguard Total Bond Market
Index Fund |
$4.9 billion |
3 |
| Vanguard GNMA Fund |
$4.2 billion |
4 |
| Vanguard Total Stock Market
Index Fund |
$3.3 billion |
10 |
| Vanguard 500 Index Fund |
$2.4 billion |
16 |
*Source: Financial Research Corporation
In the early 1970s, responding to "efficient market"
and "random walk" academic theories and as his own ideas
about low costs and diversification, John Bogle introduced the
first broad market index fund for retail investors, what is now
known as the Vanguard S&P 500 index fund. The mutual fund
industry quickly ridiculed the concept of a fund that attempted
to mirror - rather than beat - the stock market, and dubbed the
endeavor "Bogle's Folly."
Today, the Vanguard 500 fund is the second largest mutual fund
in America with over $87 billion in assets, right behind the Fidelity
Magellan fund, and Vanguard's lineup of equity and bond funds
regularly beat a majority of their peers, particularly over the
long haul.
Bogle stepped down from the Vanguard helm in 1996 to make way
for his hand-picked successor John Brennan, and Vanguard is still
the industry leader in retail index funds and overworked nautical
imagery. Despite a bear market and cutbacks in the fund industry,
Vanguard enjoyed another growth year in 2001.
Vanguard's broad stock index funds undoubtedly benefited from
tech's collapse as equity investors painfully relearned the importance
of diversification. However, investors poured $75.6 billion into
bond funds in 2001, compared to the $33.6 billion that flowed
into stock funds, according to Lipper. This reverses a trend of
the past few years where investors shoveled record amounts of
cash into equity mutual funds, and Vanguard's bond index funds
flourished.
"When the bear market began, a lot of investors had way
too much exposure to growth stocks, especially in the technology
sector," said Scott Cooley, a Morningstar senior fund analyst
who keeps tabs on several Vanguard funds. "I think some folks
realized they weren't as risk-tolerant as they thought they were,
and that's one reason why the Vanguard bond index funds have enjoyed
such strong inflows over the past year."
Vanguard also continued rolling out Admiral Shares for its funds
to reward large and long-standing accounts - the special share
class in now available for 52 funds. The average expense ratio
for Admiral Shares is 0.23%, compared to 0.29% for regular investor
class shares.
In a nod to the growing popularity of exchange-traded funds,
Vanguard introduced
VIPERs as separate shareclasses for its Total Stock Market and
Extended Market index funds.
However, one blemish for Vanguard in 2001 was a disappointing
legal defeat at the hands of index provider Standard & Poor's.
Unhappy with its licensing agreement, S&P asked a federal
court to bar Vanguard from using its indexes for ETF shareclasses
of existing Vanguard funds. In April, a federal judge ruled
in favor of S&P and granted an injunction preventing Vanguard
from launching S&P VIPERs. Vanguard appealed
the decision but to no avail.
The defeat was an unexpected blow for Vanguard. "In our
wildest dreams, we didn't think we'd lose the court case,"
Vanguard index fund guru Gus Sauter told The Wall Street Journal.
At this point the future of S&P VIPERs is unclear, but many
industry observers believe the appeal denial may have sealed their
fate unless the two firms can somehow reconcile their differences.
In any case, Vanguard is still free to launch VIPERs for its index
funds that aren't tied to S&P indexes.