Janus Funds
Decline Sparks Debate Page
2
Yet part of the current pain at Janus is self-inflicted:
a strategy of investing in volatile technology stocks
and taking large stakes in young untried companies
has loaded the funds with hard-to-trade private placements.
In market downturns, these stocks often perform poorly.
The wild popularity of the Janus funds forced the
company to close seven of its 16 equity funds, as
they had become unwieldy. Still, this year alone another
$38.5 billion of new cash has poured into Janus retail
funds designed for individual investors. Most industry
observers do not expect these new funds to generate
the impressive gains of earlier years.
Managers at index funds are spared the challenge
of deciding where to place new funds. As John Mortimer,
vice president and senior portfolio manager at Schwab's
Fund of Funds Group, explains, "As a index fund
manager, you really have no opinion on the marketplace.
You're hired to track the index: that is your goal.
If the market goes down 20 percent, your goal is to
go down 20 percent."
Index or Managed Funds? Two Index Fund Managers
Straddle Fence
As to whether index fund returns will continue to
outperform managed funds, Mortimer says, "Historically
money follows performance. Just like managed funds
can underperform, so can index funds during other
time periods. We recommend a combination of indexes
and actives. Schwab's mantra is a 'core and explore'
philosophy which recommends investor have some of
their assets indexed and some in actively managed
funds."
John
Montgomery, portfolio manager at Bridgeway
Fund, Inc., oversees six funds, two of which are
index funds. He talks effusively of the advantages
of index funds, then confesses his own money is in
managed funds: "There are a lot of advantages
to index funds-lower cost, and tax efficiencies especially.
And beyond that there's the predictability relative
to the market. And apart from market surprises, you
don't get the added surprises of management turnover
or radical changes of philosophy. Also, longer term
the vast majority of actively manage funds underperform
the market, which speaks pretty strongly for index
funds."
The Question Is Which Index Funds
Although he advises anyone not professionally in
the market to invest in index funds, Montgomery's
own money is in Bridgeway managed funds because, he
says, "It is much easier for me to pick a winning
stock than to pick a winning mutual fund. All four
of Bridgeway's actively managed funds have beat the
market this past year." He expects the next two
years will be very good for small cap stocks, "but
for the industry as a whole I'd say the opposite is
true. I don't think the next 10 years are good to
be as good as the last 10. I don't think a 20 percent
return on the market is at all realistic on a sustained
basis. Most people didn't notice the small cap correction
in 1998, but that market dropped a full 37.9 percent-it
was the worst small cap correction since 1973. We're
back home now.
"But today the price-earnings on the stocks in
our large cap fund are twice those of our small stocks.
I ask, which of these two index funds is the riskier
fund now? Very small companies are far more volatile,
but these large companies are wildly overvalued relative
to the small ones. I think the large companies are now
much more susceptible to an extended downturn. I expect
to see some sizeable downturns in my lifetime, but I
will be fully invested whatever happens."
08/17/2000
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