Putnam

Best Blogs of the Week

This week’s posts include a great graphic related to the sequester along with two valuable posts

  • American Century – This post provides helpful insight into the investment process. We often hear FAs discuss the need/desire to understand how different PMs decide to buy/sell before selecting their fund for a specific investment style. This post answers the sell part of that question effectively.
  • Putnam – Step back from the ledge! This is a valuable graphic about sequestration.
  • Russell – I enjoy the conventional myth – contradictory facts paradigm. I’m thinking many FAs do as well and this post effective discusses the facts on taxes related to passive investing.

 

Best Blogs of the Week

Four posts this week covering topics from taxes to SMID.

  • AllianceBernstein – Nice insight into what carries the Russell 2000.
  • Columbia – Though personally I’m tired of reading about high-yield munis, this simple chart is compelling and easy for an advisor to utilize in client conversations.
  • Putnam – A simple illustration about the 2013 tax changes can be helpful in client conversations.
  • Russell – This post is the start of a series. And the point is dispel the conventional wisdom around investing in 4 and 5-star funds. I’m in.

Are the Barron’s Rankings Bad for Asset Managers?

Last week Barron’s published their annual fund family rankings. As they typically do, Barron’s focuses first and mostly on one-year results, noting that most of this year’s winners “rose from the very bottom of the 2011 list”.

Did they ever. Only one of the top 10 firms from last year remained in the top 10 this year. Putnam finished first a year after placing 57th.

Putnam touted their #1 ranking in Barron's on their Web site.

Putnam touted their #1 ranking in Barron’s on their Web site.

The Barron’s list gets a lot of attention and the winners tend to use the results as promotional fuel. But as I digested the results, I started to wonder if the Barron’s rankings do more harm than good for fund families.

The volatility of the list is one damaging aspect. Besides the short-term shuffling, this year saw 2011’s 10-year winner drop all the way to 15th in this year’s 10-year rankings.

I think it’s entirely plausible that these results can lead people to question if it’s possible for managers to have a sustainable advantage. At a time when actively-managed equity products in particular have hemorrhaged money, painting a picture of randomness is far from favorable.

The other problematic aspect of the rankings is the overwhelming emphasis placed on one-year results. Managers almost universally preach long-term thinking – that it is market cycles that matter, not days or weeks or months.

Yet, when given a chance to focus on positive one-year results, many of the firms embrace that opportunity to the fullest. Most of the top 10 have done something to trumpet the Barron’s list, something that I see as counter to a central tenet of their overall marketing and brand.

I’m not saying that firms shouldn’t be proud of good performance. But I think that to a certain degree it should be promoted in the consistent wrapper of long-term thinking and results.

Best Blogs of the Week

Hopefully everyone (in the Northeast) is settling in with a fine coffee as you read this Monday morning. We have three high-quality posts from last week to share.

  • MFS – Swanson takes a contrary position regarding US corporate profits.
  • Putnam – Nice job providing correlations and (more importantly) implications.
  • Wells Farg0 – It doesn’t hurt to refresh understandings some times. And this post is a nice Q&A related to alternatives with a leading institutional alternatives manufacturer.

 

Best Blogs of the Week

We’re providing a bevy of blogs to end 2012.

  • AllianceBernstein – This post provides a few good points in retrospect and learning from 2012.
  • BlackRock – Will interest rates rise in ’13? Read the post.
  • Columbia – This little-too-dense post provides great insight about yield looking forward. It’s easy to understand the author’s point of view and incorporate that into an investment process.
  • Putnam – Everyone knows that social security payments is eating the government. Bob Reynolds posts a succinct article on the topic with hopeful actions.