
Parts 1 and 2 of this
article discussed the first three, most heavily weighted factors used
in the -10 points to +10 points Fund Authority Score rating system.
These first three factors are:
FACTOR 1: Annualized
Investment Management Expenses and Sales Load Fees (-4 to +4
points)
FACTOR 2: Hidden Trading
Costs using Fund Portfolio Turnover as a Proxy (-3 to +3
points)
FACTOR 3: Penalize very
inferior historical performance and credit average and superior
historical performance (-2 to +2 points)
You can find a directory of Fund Authority Scores for mutual funds and ETFs here.
Diversified investment fund companies habitually create new funds. Breeding new funds allows fund companies to promote new funds that may get lucky and demonstrate above average returns over a very short period. Like moths to a flame, many individual investors will flock to any fund with seemingly superior results - no matter how short-lived or small the fund might be. Performance charts attracts the investment assets of naive performance chasing individual investors and stock brokers and investment advisors who egg them on. (See this article: How to lie with statistics: Investment performance charts)
Unfortunately, in addition to having already delivered inferior performance, laggard funds tend to get merged into a fund family's larger more mature funds that also have lousy performance records. (See this article: Choose sufficiently mature mutual funds and ETFs)
With hundreds of much better ETFs and mutual funds with longer track records, you simply do not need to play this fund industry birth and death game with your hard earned money. Since you are more likely to lose than win with very young funds, the Fund Authority Score includes a credit of +1 point, when a fund has been in existence at least 3 years.
SCORING FOR THE FUND
MATURITY FACTOR #4
Funds in existence less than 3
years = 0 points
Funds in existence 3 years or more =
+1 point
To amortize the management expenses that are necessary to manage properly a diversified investment fund each year, some minimum total asset figure is required. To illustrate, a $100M equity mutual fund with a 1% expense ratio yields $1 million annually for management expenses. In the grand scheme of what it takes to run each year, $1M is just not a lot of money - particularly for an actively managed fund. Therefore, it is reasonable for you to set minimum asset size selection criteria. (See this article: Choose mutual funds and ETFs with a minimum economical portfolio size)
SCORING FOR THE
OPERATING INEFFICIENCY PENALTY FOR VERY SMALL FUNDS FACTOR #5
Funds
with less than $250 million in portfolio assets = -1
Funds
with more than $250 million in portfolio assets = 0
FACTOR
1: Annualized Investment Management Expenses and Sales Load Fees (-5 to
+5 points)
FACTOR 2: Hidden Trading Costs using Fund
Portfolio Turnover as a Proxy (-3 to +3 points)
FACTOR
3: Penalize very inferior historical performance and credit average and
superior historical performance (-1 to +1 point)
FACTOR
4: Is the investment fund sufficiently mature? (0 or 1 point)
FACTOR
5: Operating inefficiency penalty for very small funds (-1 or
0 points)
COMBINATION OF FACTORS 1 TO 5 for the Fund Authority Score system (-10 to +10 points)
<<-- Go to Part 2________________________________________
These related articles may also be useful to you: