| Do
You Believe That Your Fortune Is In The Stars?
By Larry Swedroe
September 25, 2001 |
|
The brand that has emerged as dominant in the 1990s is not
Fidelity, Putnam, or even Merrill Lynch-but instead is Morningstar.
R. Pozen, The Mutual Fund Business, 1998, p.75
Perhaps the most popular approach to selecting mutual funds is
to rely on the very popular rating service provided by Morningstar
that rates funds using a star system similar to the one used by
film critics. Ads touting four- and five-star ratings are to be
found everywhere. Investors must believe the stars have predictive
value. One study covering the period January through August 1995
found that an amazing 97% of fund inflows went into four- and
five-star funds, while three-star funds experienced outflows.1
An August 2001 study, by Diane Del Guerico and Paula A. Tkac
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, investigated how changes
in Morningstar's ratings influence mutual fund cash flows. The
study, "Star Power: The Effect of Morningstar Ratings on
Mutual Fund Flows," covered almost 3,400 domestic equity
mutual funds for the period November 1996 to October 1999, and
identified over 12,000 ratings changes. The following is a summary
of the key findings.
- The initiation of a 5-star rating results in average inflow
over the next six months that is 53% greater than the normal
inflow.
- An upgrade from 4- to 5-stars increases the rate of inflows
over the next six months by 35%.
- Even upgrades from 2- to 3-stars, and from 3- to 4-stars,
generates positive abnormal inflows.
- A downgrade from 5- to 4-star has a negative impact, though
to a much lesser degree. Fund inflows fell from their norm by
8%. One reason for the smaller impact of a downgrade is that
existing investors might be reluctant to sell as capital gains
taxes are likely to be incurred as a result of a sale. Another
reason is that a 5-star fund that is on a recommended list might
not be removed from that list unless the fund continues to lag
in performance.
- Downgrades from 3- to 2-stars and 4- to 3- stars also generate
abnormal negative flow.
- The influence of ratings changes is observable virtually instantaneously
- demonstrating the investors are paying close attention to
the ratings, and placing a high value on their predictive ability.
The authors also noted that funds are "more likely to advertise
if they have a have a 5-star rating to tout," and advertising
impacts fund flows. The paper cited a study that found that funds
that advertise in popular magazines such as Barron's or Money
receive significantly greater inflows than a control sample of
funds with similar performance.2 Funds, of course, are only likely
to advertise 4- or 5-star ratings.
For investors the essential question is whether or not chasing
ratings is the winning strategy. Let's examine the evidence.
Morningstar gives the coveted five-star rating to the funds it
believes is among the top 10% of all funds, and a one-star rating
to the bottom 10%. Mark Hulbert's The Hulbert Financial Digest
tracked the performance of the five-star funds for the period
1993-2000. For that eight-year period the total return (pretax)
on Morningstar's top-rated U.S. funds averaged +106%. This compared
to a total return of +222% for the total stock market, as measured
by the Wilshire 5000 Equity Index. Hulbert also found that the
top-rated funds, while achieving less than 50% of the market's
return, carried a relative risk (measured by standard deviation)
that was 26% greater than that of the market. If the performance
had been measured on an after-tax basis, the tax inefficiency
of actively managed funds relative to a passive index fund would
have made the comparison significantly worse.3
A Financial Research Corp. study covering the period January
1, 1995-September 30, 1998 revealed that two- and three-star funds
outperformed their four- and five-star counterparts for the entire
period. The study's conclusion: "the linkage between past
performance and future realizations is tenuous if not nonexistent."4
A similar study, by Christopher R. Blake, associate professor
of finance at Fordham University's Graduate School of Business,
and Matthew Morey, assistant professor of finance at Fordham,
found that for the five-year period ending December 31, 1997,
the average five-star fund underperformed the market by almost
4% per annum. The study also found that the differences between
the performances of the three-, four-, and five-star funds are
so small as to have very little statistical significance.5
Blake and Morey concluded that while a low star rating was actually
a good predictor of relatively poor future performance, high star
ratings were not good predictors of future top performance. The
top rated funds did not outperform the next highest or even median
ranked funds.6 Morningstar has even stated that there is no connection
between past and future performance and stars, historic star ratings,
or any raw data, and that the stars should not be used to predict
short-term returns or to time fund purchases.7 Despite this strong
admission, it is obvious from the heavy expenditures of advertising
dollars by mutual funds that they believe investors perceive the
star ratings as having predictive value.
Morningstar's ratings are so popular that there have been many
studies on their ratings of funds and future performance. One
of these, The Persistence of Morningstar Ratings, sought to determine
if there was any useful information contained in the star ratings.8
If there is persistence in fund ratings it would be valuable information.
Unfortunately, the authors concluded, after studying variable
annuities, equity funds, and bond funds, that there is little
evidence of persistence of performance. The study found:
- For four-and five-star equity funds, year-to-year persistence
is the equivalent of a coin flip. Less than half of all mutual
funds rated four or five-star at year end 1997 still held that
high rating at year end 1998. Basically, there is a reversion
to a 3-star mean.
- Persistence for variable annuities is worse than a flip of
the coin. Year-to-year persistence is only about 40%.
- Persistence is the worst for taxable bond funds at just over
20%.
- For equity funds with just 3-year ratings the year-to-year
persistence of ratings was less than 25%. Keep this in mind
when you think you have discovered a new guru.
You can avoid the mistake of relying on either Morningstar's
rating system or the past performance of actively managed funds
in general as a way to select the building blocks for your portfolio
by remembering the evidence presented here and by listening carefully
to the following comments from Morningstar's Director of Research,
John Rekenthaler, a man for whom I have the highest regard, especially
for his integrity in an industry not especially known for it.
- There's actually not much difference between mid-ranked funds
and top-rated ones. Three-star, four-star and five-star funds
have been found to perform pretty much alike.9 (In the interests
of full disclosure, Rekenthaler did go on to point out that
mid-rank and high rank funds do better on average than the lower
rank funds. This is a similar finding to the results found by
Blake and Morey. However, the persistency of poor performance
of low rank funds is most likely a function of their high expenses,
and not poor stock selection skills.)
- We should have more answers. There is surprisingly little
that we can say for sure about how to find top-notch stock funds.10
- And, commenting on whether investors should pay attention
to mutual fund advertisements:
to be fair, I don't think
that you'd want to pay much attention to Morningstar's star
ratings either.11
Finally, listen to the words of Amy Arnott, the editor of Morningstar's
publication. "Over the years, Morningstar's star system has
been frequently - and sometimes willfully - misunderstood. Many
commentators insist on treating the star rating as a predictive
measure or a short-term trading signal. The rating, which is clearly
labeled as a historical profile, does neither."12
- Christopher R. Blake and Matthew R. Morey, "Morningstar
Ratings and Mutual Fund Performance," Journal of Financial
and Quantitative Analysis, September 2000.
- Prem C. Jain and Joanna Shuang Wu, 2000, "Truth in Mutual
Fund Advertising: Evidence on Future Performance and Fund Flows,"
Journal of Finance 55, 937-
- John Bogle, "The Stock Market Universe-Stars, Comets,
and the Sun," speech before the Financial Analysts of Philadelphia,
February 15, 2001.
- InvestmentNews, March 29, 1999.
- New York Times, April 4, 1999.
- Christopher R. Blake and Matthew R. Morey, "Morningstar
Ratings and Mutual Fund Performance," Journal of Financial
and Quantitative Analysis, September 2000
- Investment Advisor, September 1994
- Journal of Financial Planning, September 2000.
- St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 10, 2000.
- Wall Street Journal, December 22, 1998.
- In the Vanguard, Autumn 2000.
- Amy C. Arnott, Editor, Beyond the Stars: The New Category
Rating, Morningstar Mutual Funds, Summary Section, Dec. 6, 1996,
vol. 29, issue 2.
Larry Swedroe is the author of "What Wall Street Doesn't
Want You to Know" and "The Only Guide To A Winning Investment
Strategy You Will Ever Need." He is also the Director of
Research for and a Principal of Buckingham Asset Management, Inc.
in St. Louis, Missouri. However, his opinions and comments expressed
within this column are his own, and may not accurately reflect
those of Buckingham Asset Management.