| Morningstar
Study Confirms Virtues of Buy-and-Hold in Bear Market
By IndexFunds.com Staff
March 15, 2002 |
|
Owners of boring diversified portfolios may have found it difficult
to resist dabbling in tech stocks during the dot-com craze of
yesteryear. Now, having lived through the painful bear market
of the last 12 months, many investors are wondering if some nifty
fund rotation can stem the tide of all that red ink. Some are
saying that buy-and-hold isn't all it's cracked up to be as the
broad Wilshire 5000 index lost 8.36% for the year as of the end
of February.
No one said it would be easy. In fact, psychologically it's most
difficult to resist tinkering when the market goes to extremes,
be it bull or bear.
Numerous studies have shown that the more an individual investor
trades, the worse he or she does. But what about specifically
in a bear market?
To find out, Morningstar fund analyst Peter Di Teresa grouped
4,880 domestic equity funds by turnover ratio and examined their
performance over the last year. Why look at fund performance and
not individual investor performance? Di Teresa chose to look at
mutual funds because they are run by professionals who presumably
have more time and resources at their disposal. Therefore they
should have a better chance of weathering a down market than the
average Joe or Mary.
"In a bear market, the feeling is that the pros should at
least be able to avoid the big disasters through trading,"
said Di Teresa.
First, Di Teresa compared the performance of funds in the top
third in terms of turnover ratio against the bottom third. The
trigger-happy funds in the top third (1,626 funds) lost 10.5%
over the last year as of 2/28/2002, while the lowest third shed
6.3%.
"The effect of high turnover gets even more pronounced when
you break things down further," said Di Teresa.
This time, he took the same group of domestic stock funds and
broke them up evenly by turnover into five groups. Over the same
time period, the highest turnover fund group (976 funds) finished
down 11.5% for the year, while the lowest turnover group lost
5.8%.
The results of this cut-and-dry study indirectly expose the dangers
of trying to time the market with mutual funds. So feel free to
rejigger your "boring" portfolio in light of recent
events in the market - just realize the pros have already tried
it with theirs and apparently it doesn't seem to work that well.