Monthly Archives: November 2011

Manager changes, Archive

By Editor

Because bond fund managers, traditionally, had made relatively modest impacts of their funds’ absolute returns, Manager Changes typically highlights changes in equity and hybrid funds.

Fund Out with the old In with the new Date
Absolute Opportunities (AOFOX) No one’s out Pine Cobble Capital joins five other institutional firms sub-advising the fund. 07/11
Alger Health Sciences (AHSAX) David Farhadi Dan Chung and Maria Liotta. Chung, Alger’s CIO/CEO, has helped run the fund since 2005 05/11
Allianz RCM Disciplined International Equity (RAIGX). Ara Jelalian Steven Berexa 08/11
Allianz RCM Global Commodity Equity (ARMAX), formerly Allianz RCM Global Resources No one, but . . . Alec Patterson joined the management team and now co-manages with Paul Strand 09/11
Alpine Cyclical Advantage Property Fund (EUEYX) No one’s out . . . David Kruth, who has experience as a Goldman Sachs global real estate manager, joins as an “associate manager” 04/11
Alpine Dynamic Dividend (ADVDX) Andrew Kohl The rest of the portfolio team (Jill Evans, Kevin Shacknofsky, Joshua Duitz) is joined byBrian Hennessey. 04/11
Altegris Managed Futures Strategy (MFTAX) Rodney Square Management Altegris Advisors is hunting for a new manager. In the interim, they’ll run the fund themselves. 07/11
American Century International Bond (BEGBX) No one, but . . . Simon Chester joined the management team 08/11
Aston/Barings International (ABIIX) Nathan Griffiths Former co-manager David Bertocchi becomes the lead manager. 04/11
Aston/Fortis Real Estate (AARIX) Fortis Investment Management Harrison Street Securities, which will occasion a renaming to Aston/Harrison 07/11
BlackRock International Bond Portfolio (BIIAX) Andrew Gordon, who’s been with the fund since 1997 Scott Thiel joins Yoni Saposh 08/11
BlackRock Science & Technology Opportunities (BGSAX) No one, but . . . Paul Ma joined the management team of Thomas Callan, Jean Rosenbaum, and Erin Xie. 09/11
BlackRock World Income Fund (MDWIX) Andrew Gordon, who’s been with the fund since 2006 Scott Thiel joins Yoni Saposh 08/11
Buffalo China (BUFCX) No one, but . . . Shelly Ma joins as a co-manager on the steadily-improving BUFCX. In the past five years it has trailed 98% of its peers, then 96%, 91%, 69% and – over the first three quarters of 2011, a breakthrough – 49%. 09/11
Buffalo High Yield (BUFHX) Kent Gasaway The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Buffalo International (BUFIX) No one, but . . . Shelly Ma joins as a co-manager, whose new fund is merely “consistently mediocre” rather than “eye-watering” (see Buffalo China) 09/11
Buffalo Large Cap (BUFEX) Grant Sarris, in part of a larger management realignment The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Calvert Bond (CSIBX) Gregory Habeeb Matt Duch 09/11
Calvert Income (CFICX) Gregory Habeeb Michael Abramo 09/11
Calvert Large Cap Growth (CLCIX) John Montgomery, president of Bridgeway A team from Atlanta Capital Management will run the fund until its merger into Calvert Equity (CSIEX), which they also run. 05/11
Calvert Social Index (CSXAX) Kevin Yousif Eric Lessnau and David Jones 05/11
Columbia Dividend Income (LBSAX) No one goes but . . . David King and Michael Barclay join Richard Dahlberg and Scott Davis 04/11
Columbia Emerging Markets Opportunity (IDEAX) Vanessa Donegan Irina Miklavchich and existing manager Rafael Polatinsky. 05/11
Columbia Global Equity (IGLGX) Andrew Holliman Esther Perkins joins current co-manager Stephen Thornber 06/11
Columbia Global Extended Alpha (RTAAX) Andrew Holliman Stephen Thornber and Jeremy Podger. 06/11
Columbia Mortgage and Asset Backed (NMTGX) Lee Reddin Michael Zazzarino, who has been co-manager of the fund since 2007, will be lead manager. 09/11
Davidson Multi-Cap Equity Fund William B. Whitlow is retiring The lead manager, Brian Clancy, remains but gains a 7th co-manager, Paul Condrat 08/11
Dreyfus Global Sustainability (DGYAX) Five new co-managers from Mellon Capital were added in mid-April. 04/11
DWS Climate Change (WRMAX) Nicolas Huber Andrew Pidden comes in, and the fund becomes DWS Clean Tech 08/11
DWS Emerging Markets Equity (SEKAX) Thomas Gerhardt who joined this modestly regrettable $300 million fund got canned. Good question. In a particularly cruel shot, DWS announced that “until May 9, 2011,” co-manager Rainer Vermehren is in charge. Vermehren joined the same day as Gerhardt and appears slated to be employed seven weeks longer. 04/11
DWS Gold & Precious Metals (SGDAX) Pierre Martin The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
DWS International (SUIAX) Nikolaus Poehlmann, Andreas Wendelken, and Mark Schumann – another undistinguished team that was hired just after the Emerging Markets team. Jason Inzer and Thomas Voecking who, according to company documents, will sort of collate the recommendations of thousands of analysts 04/11
DWS Strategic Value (KDHAX) Volker Dosch, Oliver Pfeil, and Thomas Schuessler – who were undistinguished in the execution of their post. Jason Inzer and Thomas Voecking (see DWS International) 04/11
Eagle Growth & Income Fund (HRCVX) for reasons unclear (it’s been a great fund), Thornburg Investment Management has been terminated and an in-house team (Edmund Cowart, David Blount and John Pandtle) replaces them. They manage a billion in “other accounts” but no funds. 04/11
Federated Balanced Allocation (BAFAX) John Leibee Founding managers Hans Utsch and Lawrence Auriana, who have been here since 1986, lead a five-person management team. 07/11
Federated Capital Appreciation (FEDEX) Carol Miller James Grefenstatte joins Dean Kartsonas 05/11
Federated Capital Income (CAPAX). No one, but . . . Christopher Smith joined the management team 08/11
Federated Kaufmann (KAUAX) John Leibee Hans und Franz live on! Which is to say the founding managers, Hans Utsch and Lawrence Auriana, who have been here since 1986, continue to lead a five-person management team. 07/11
Federated Kaufmann Large Cap (KLCAX) John Leibee Founding managers Hans Utsch and Lawrence Auriana, who have been here since 1986, lead a five-person management team. 07/11
Fidelity Advisor Equity Income (FEIAX) Stephen Petersen James Morrow and Adam Kramer 04/11
Fidelity China Region (FHKCX) Joseph Tse, who has a great 2010 and good 2011 Bobby Bao, who manages some of Fidelity’s Canadian funds (AsiaStar) and portions of their Pyramis portfolios 08/11
Fidelity Commodity Strategy (FFCSX) Jeffrey Adams, who works for Fido’s quant Geode arm Bobe Simon, Lou Bottari, Patrick Waddell, Maximilian Kaufman, and Eric Matteson. 05/11
Fidelity Income Replacement and Jonathan Shelno Andrew Dierdorf and new manager Christopher Sharpe 07/11
Fidelity International Value (FIVLX) George Stairs, who I decried as a mediocre Putnam manager when Fidelity hired him Alexander Zavratsky 09/11
Fidelity Japan (FJPNX) Robert Rowland Rei Shigekawa. This change was profiled with some concern by Chuck Jaffe of CBS/Marketwatch. 04/11
Fidelity Magellan (FMAGX) Harry Lange, the third Fidelity superstar to flame-out here Jeffrey Feingold becomes the fourth Fidelity superstar to fling himself on Lynch’s Legacy 09/11
Fidelity NASDAQ Composite Index (FNCMX) Jeffrey Adams, another Geode guy Bobe Simon, Lou Bottari, Patrick Waddell, Maximilian Kaufman, and Eric Matteson. 05/11
First Eagle Gold (SGGDX) No one Chris Kwan joined Abhay Deshpande and Rachel Benepe. 06/11
First Investors Blue Chip (FIBCX) Matthew Wright Edwin Miska and Sean Reidy 05/11
Forward Emerging Markets (FEMMX) Nidhi Mahurkar Peter Jarvis. A solid fund, team run, that’s ground through 23 managers. 05/11
Forward Funds’ Forward Growth (FFGRX) Peter J. Niedland The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Forward Growth Fund Peter J. Niedland is “hereby deleted” Mr. Niedland was a recent addition to the portfolio team, the rest of which remains. 08/11
GAMCO Westwood Mighty Mites (WEIMX) No one. Elizabeth Lilly joins the existing team of Mario Gabelli, Laura Linehan, Walter Walsh 07/11
Generation Wave Growth (GWGFX) Jeffrey Middleswart Gerry Sullivan, who also manages the quant Industry Leaders fund (ILFIX). GS is the 10thmanager in 10 years, with the changes here paralleling changes in Vice Fund 07/11
ING Equity Dividend (IEDAX) Christopher Corapi joined the management team 05/11
ING Global Bond (INGBX). No one, but . . . Robert Robis joins Michael Mata and Christine Hurtsellers. 08/11
ING Global Equity Dividend (IAGEX) Moudy El Khodr Bruno Springael will join Nicholas Simar, and Herman Klein. 05/11
ING Global Opportunities (IAFAX) Tjeert Keijzer and Tycho van Wijk Huub van der Riet and Alex van der Laan join Dirk-Jan Verzuu on this sad sack little fund. 05/11
ING Global Resources (IGRAX) No one, but . . . John Bailey became the third c0-manager 08/11
ING International Small Cap Multi-Manager (NTKLX) Qi Zeng Patrick McCafferty, who is part of the Acadian Management sleeve of the portfolio 04/11
ING International Value (NIVAX) Glenn Carlson, Brent Woods, Jim Brown, Amelia Morris, Brent Fredberg, Jeffrey Germain, and Paul Hechmer Marin Jansen, David Rabinowitz, and Joseph Vultaggio. 05/11
ING Janus Contrarian (IJCAX) Janus Capital Management ING Investment Management, though the fund will merge into ING Growth and Income in 2012. 07/11
Invesco Global (ATKAX) Heather Peirce Dana Love, her former co-manager 04/11
Invesco Global Equity (GTNDX) Michael Fraikin Ralph Coutant and Andrew Waisburd join Uwe Draeger, Karl-Georg Bayer and Jens Langewand 05/11
Invesco Global Growth (AGGAX) “Senior” portfolio manager Barrett Sides retires Sides’ three co-managers will carry on without him. It’s a mediocre, but not bad, fund. 06/11
Invesco International Growth (AIIEX) “Senior” portfolio manager Barrett Sides is retiring but won’t be missed enough to be replaced. It’s a very solid fund with a well-established team. This is the 8th Invesco fund to see a manager change since May 2011. 06/11
Invesco Leisure (ILSAX) Jonathan Mueller Ido Cohen and existing manager Juan Hartsfield. 05/11
Invesco Select Real Estate Income (ASRAX) James Trowbridge Joe Rodriguez, Jr., Mark Blackburn, Paul Curbo, and Darin Turner. 05/11
Invesco Small Companies (ATIAX) Ted Chisholm Robert Mikalachki, Virginia Au and Jason Whiting 04/11
Invesco Structured Core (SCAUX) Anthony Shufflebotham Daniel Tsai and Andrew Waisburd get added to the existing team 05/11
Janus Contrarian (JACNX) David Decker who has run the fund since ’96. Very independent portfolio, very high volatility. Dan Kozlowski. DK left Janus to run a hedge fund. Apparently part of the deal to secure his return was having Janus become a partner in his hedge fund. 05/11
Janus Fund (JANSX) Daniel Riff leaves to become sole manager of Janus Long/Short Burt Wilson, who has been with Janus for six years, joins Jonathan Coleman who has co-managed the fund since 2007 05/11
Janus Global Bond (JGBAX) No one but. . . Chris Diaz was added as a third manager 05/11
Janus Global Technology (JAGTX) Barney Wilson Brad Slingerland, who ran the fund with Wilson in 2006-08. He’ll Tweet for you as bradsling. 05/11
Janus Long-Short (JALSX) David Decker whose record is low correlation, high risk, modest returns Daniel Riff, who has been comanaging the fund, will become the sole manager 05/11
John Hancock Greater China Opportunities (JCOAX) No one is going but Kai Kong Chay joined the management team of Terrance Pak Hing Chum, and Ronald Chan. 05/11
JPMorgan Asia Equity (JAEAX Andrew Swan Joshua Tay, Pauline Ng, and new manager Patrick Chiu. 05/11
JPMorgan Asia Equity (JAEAX) No one, but . . . Patrick Chiu joined the management team 08/11
JPMorgan Multi-Sector Income (JSIAX) Jon Jonsson The rest of the portfolio team (Robert Michele and Iain Stealey) are joined by Nicholas Gartside and Matthew Pallai. 04/11
Legg Mason Capital Management All Cap Fund (SPAAX) David Nelson Jay Leopold and Bill Miller remain at this overpriced underperformer. 04/11
Loomis Sayles Global Equity and Income (LGMAX) Mark Baribeau Daniel Fuss, David Rolley, and Warren Koontz 05/11
Loomis Sayles Small Cap Value (LSCRX) Daniel Thelen Joseph Gatz 05/11
Lord Abbott allocation funds, generally A committee The Chairman. Robert Gerber is now the solo manager, in place of a management committee which he formerly chaired. 08/11
MainStay International Equity (MSEAX) Rupal Bhansali Edward Ramos 06/11
Managers AMG FQ Tax-Managed U.S. Equity (MFQAX) Andrew Berkin David Chrisman 06/11
Managers AMG FQ U.S. Equity (FQUAX) Andrew Berkin David Chrisman 06/11
Managers Cadence Capital Appreciation No one, but . . . Robert Ginsberg, formerly of Invesco and Putnam, joined the management team 08/11
Managers Cadence Emerging Companies No one, but . . . Robert Ginsberg joined the management team 08/11
Managers Cadence Focused Growth No one, but . . . Robert Ginsberg joined the management team 08/11
Managers Cadence Mid-Cap No one, but . . . Robert Ginsberg joined the management team 08/11
Marshall Mid-Cap Value (MRVIX) No one goes but . . . Gregory Dirkse and Brian Janowski join Matthew Fahey in running the fund. 04/11
Marsico 21st Century (MXXIX) Cory Gilchrist, who was very optimistic about an economic turnaround Brandon Geisler, who isn’t. 09/11
Marsico Global (MGLBX), Cory Gilchrist James Gendelman and Tom Marsico 09/11
MassMutual Select Diversified International (MMZAX) AllianceBernstein Gerd Woort-Menker, Jeroen Huysinga, and Georgina Perceval Maxwell of JP Morgan 06/11
MassMutual Select Overseas (MOSAX) AllianceBernstein Gerd Woort-Menker, Jeroen Huysinga, and Georgina Perceval Maxwell of JP Morgan will join teams from Harris Associates and MFS. 06/11
MFS International Growth (MGRAX) No one In January 2012, Kevin Dwan joins David Antonelli. No explanation for the unusually long lead time. 07/11
Morgan Stanley Global Strategist (SRTAX) No one Cyril Moullé-Berteaux joins Mark Bavoso 07/11
Morgan Stanley Institutional Balanced (MPBAX) No one Cyril Moullé-Berteaux joins Mark Bavoso 07/11
Nationwide International Value (NWVAX) AllianceBernstein UBS Global Asset Management 06/11
Nuveen Strategy Balanced Allocation (FSGNX), No one, but . . . James Colon joins existing manager David Cline 06/11
Nuveen Strategy Conservative Allocation (FSFIX) No one, but . . . James Colon joins existing manager David Cline 06/11
Nuveen Strategy Growth Allocation (FAGSX) No one, but . . . James Colon joins existing manager David Cline 06/11
Oakmark International Small Cap (OAKEX) No one’s leaving Michael Manelli, an international equities analyst, joined David Herro who has managed the fund since inception. Herro manages three funds and serves as CIO, so this might simply be stress relief. 05/11
Old Mutual TS&W Mid-Cap Value (OTMAX) John Pickler Brett Hawkins 06/11
Oppenheimer Main Street Small & Mid Cap (OPMSX) Benjamin Ram Raymond Anello joins Matthew Ziehl and Raman Vardharaj 05/11
Penn Series Small Cap Value James B. Otness is being phased out by 12/31/11 The rest of the team is going to work just a bit harder. 08/11
PIMCO Emerging Markets Bond (PAEMX) No one, but . . . Ramin Toloui will be joined by Michael Gomez 09/11
PIMCO Global Advantage Strategy (PGSAX) No one, but . . . Andrew Balls was added as co-manager 09/11
Principal SmallCap Blend (PLLAX), Thomas Morabito Brian Pattinson will also join the management team 08/11
Principal SmallCap Growth (PMAAX). Thomas Morabito Brian Pattinson will also join the management team 08/11
Principal SmallCap Value (PSUAX), Thomas Morabito Phil Nordhus and Brian Pattinson 08/11
Quant Small Cap (QBNAX) Matt Williams Robert von Pentz and Rhys Williams 04/11
Rochdale Fixed Income Opportunities (RIMOX) Stefan Pinter, Theodore Stohner, and Maxim Matveev of GML Capital have been added to the teams managing the fund. The other teams are from Seix Investment Advisers and Federated. 06/11
RS Small Cap Growth (RSEGX) Allison Thacker, one of four co-managers Three co-managers remain. Ms. Thacker is leaving to manage Rice University’s $4 billon endowment. 09/11
RS Technology (RSIFX) Allison Thacker Three comanagers remain. Ms. Thacker is leaving to manage Rice University’s $4 billon endowment. 08/11
Russell Emerging Markets (REMAX) T. Rowe Price Delaware Management Company and Victoria 1522 Investments join five other institutional teams already on the fund 05/11
Russell Tax-Managed US Large Cap (RTLAX) Turner Investment Partners (to whom this happens a lot) Sustainable Growth Advisers, which joins four other institutional teams on the fund 05/11
Russell US Quantitative Equity (REQAX) No one . . . Russell decided that four sub-advisers weren’t enough, so they added PanAgora Asset Management 05/11
Russell US Small & Mid Cap (REBSX) Robert Kuharic Jon Eggins 05/11
Schwab Core Equity (SWANX) Vivienne Hsu The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Schwab Dividend Equity (SWDSX) Vivienne Hsu The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Schwab Premier Equity (SWPSX) Vivienne Hsu, who also chips in on several other “active equity” funds No one yet named, presumably her co-managers will become lead managers 08/11
Sentinel Mid Cap Value (SYVIX) Steinberg Asset Management Effective 08/11, Crow Point Partners – run by some former Evergreen managers – takes over 06/11
Sentinel Mid Cap Value (SYVIX) Steinberg Asset Management Peter DeCaprio and Timothy O’Brien of Crow Point Partners 08/11
SSgA Emerging Markets (SEMSX) Brad Aham, but just until Christmas Co-manager Chris Laine will manage the fund during Brad’s leave of absence. 09/11
T. Rowe Price Africa & Middle East (TRAMX) Joseph Rohm, who left suddenly for South Africa Chris Alderson. 07/11
T. Rowe Price Retirement funds Ned Notzon, long-time lead of Price’s allocation funds, steps down as “co-chairman” of these funds ahead of his year-end retirement. Jerome Clark became the “sole chairman” of the fund on 8/1/11 07/11
TIAA-CREF Bond (TIBDX). Elizabeth Black and Steven Sterman John Cerra remains and is joined by Steven Raab and Joseph Higgins 08/11
TIAA-CREF Enhanced International Equity Index (TFIIX). Ping Wang goes Current co-managers Steve Rossiello and Pablo Mitchell will soldier on without him. 06/11
TIAA-CREF Enhanced Large-Cap Growth Index (TLIIX) Ruxiang Qian Comanager Kevin Zhang goes solo. 06/11
Vice Fund (VICEX) Jeffrey Middleswart Gerry Sullivan, who also manages the quant Industry Leaders fund (ILFIX). GS becomes the fund’s 7th manager in nine years. 07/11
Virtus Multi-Sector Fixed Income (NAMFX) Goodwin Capital Advisers The other subadvisor, Newfleet Asset Management, will take sole control. 06/11
Wasatch Global Opportunities (WAGOX) Robert Gardiner and Blake Walker. Gardiner also runs three small cap funds for Wasatch but his official bio lists this as “his true passion.” Oops. JB Taylor, who manages Wasatch Core Growth, joins Roger Edgely 05/11
Wasatch International Opportunities (WAIOX) Blake Walker Laura Geritz, who runs Wasatch Emerging Markets Small Cap, joins Roger Edgeley 05/11
Wells Fargo Advantage C&B Mid Cap Value (CBMAX) Kermit Eck will leave on Dec. 31, 2011 The rest of the management team remains in place 09/11
Wells Fargo Advantage Intrinsic Small Cap Value (WFSMX) Jeffrey Peck is gone… And apparently didn’t need to be replaced. Given the fund’s long-term weakness, the absence of a new manager suggests either that Wells Fargo is resigned or that they think Mr. Peck was the problem. Owie. 06/11
Wells Fargo Advantage Small Cap Growth (MNSCX) Jerome Philpott and Stuart Roberts Joseph Eberhardy, Thomas Ognar, and Bruce Olson 04/11
Wells Fargo Advantage Small Cap Value (SSMVX) No one, but . . . Erik Astheimer and Michael Schneider were added as co-managers. 09/11
Wells Fargo Advantage Strategic Large Cap Growth (ESGAX) Shannon Reid, David Chow, and Jay Zelko Tom Ognar. I’ve always been fascinated with Ognar’s name. Sounds like a Norse hero. Managed Strong Growth for years, but should have managed one of the old PrinCor funds. You can see him stalking into the feasting hall now and announcing, “I am Ognar of Princor.” 08/11
Winslow Green Growth (WGGFX) Jack Robinson Karina Funk, Elizabeth Levy, and David Powell 09/11

Manager changes, October 2011

By Editor

Because bond fund managers, traditionally, had made relatively modest impacts of their funds’ absolute returns, Manager Changes typically highlights changes in equity and hybrid funds.

Fund Out with the old In with the new Dt
BlackRock Total Return (MAHQX) No one, but . . . Bob Miller joins the fund’s three existing managers. 10/11
Davis Opportunity(RPEAX) No one, but . . . F. Jack Liebau is now listed as manager. 10/11
DWS Latin America Equity (SLANX) Florian Tanzer leaves as co-manager. Robert Kalin joins existing manager, Rainer Vermehren. 10/11
Fairholme (FAIRX) Charlie Fernandez, Bruce’s cousin-in-law Bruce Berkowitz. 10/11
Fairholme Allocation (FAAFX) Charlie Fernandez, Bruce’s neighbor Bruce Berkowitz. 10/11
Fairholme Focused Income (FOCIX) Charlie Fernandez, Bruce’s president Bruce Berkowitz. 10/11
Fidelity Equity-Income (FEQIX) Stephen Petersen: 18 years, $8 billion and it was still a closeted index A three-manager team of James Morrow, Adam Kramer, and Ramona Persaud, with Morrow as lead 10/11
Fidelity Equity-Income II (FEQTX) Stephen Petersen: $4 billion and 2.5 years, same outcome Scott Offen 10/11
Fidelity International Small Cap (FISMX) Noriko Takahashi Nicholas Price, manager of Fido Japan Smaller Companies, will handle the fund’s investments in Japan. 10/11
Goldman Sachs Capital Growth (GSCGX), Concentrated Growth, Flexible Cap Growth and Strategic Growth Fund David Shell is retiring at the end of the year, after managing $21 billion poorly Current portfolio managers from the GSAM growth team. 10/11
Goldman Sachs Capital Growth (GSCGX) Kumar Venkateswaran Current portfolio managers from the GSAM growth team. 10/11
Invesco Global Equity (GTNDX) Ralph Coutant Michael Abata joins the existing management team. 10/11
Invesco Structured Core(SCAUX) Ralph Coutant Michael Abata joins the existing management team. 10/11
Mainstay Global High Income (MGHAX) Howard Booth leaves as co-manager. New co-manager Jakob Bak joins the fund’s three remaining managers. 10/11
MassMutual Premiere Diversified Bond (MDVAX) Jill Fields left as co-manager. Sean Feeley, a member of subadvisor Babson Capital’s high-yield team, was named as a new co-manager. 10/11
Old Mutual Barrow Hanley Value(OAFOX) No one, but . . . Current manager, James Barrow, is joined by co-managers Robert Chambers, Timothy Culler, Mark Giambrone, and J. Ray Nixon Jr. 10/11
Old Mutual Large Cap Growth (OLGBX) Bradley Fretz leaves as co-manager. The rest of the management team remains in place 10/11
Steward Select Bond (SEAKX) Howard Potter leaves as co-manager. Edward Jaroski will join as co-manager with Claude Cody 10/11
T. Rowe Price Africa & Middle East (TRAMX) Chris Alderson, who was temporarily managing after the abrupt departure of Joseph Rohm, mid-2011. Oliver Bell, formerly of Pictet Asset Management 10/11

November 1, 2011

By David Snowball

Dear friends,

Welcome to David’s Market Timing Newsletter!  You’ll remember that, at the beginning of October, I pointed out that (1) you hated stocks and (2) you should be buying them.  One month and one large rally – small caps are up 17% for the month through 10/27 while large caps added 12% – later, I celebrate the fact that I’ve now tied Abby Joseph Cohen for great market timing calls (one each).  Unlike AJC, I promise never to do it again.

October brought more than a sizzling rally.  It brought record breaking heat to the U.K. and record-breaking snowfalls to New York and New England.  To my students and colleagues at Augustana College, it brought a blaze of color, cool mornings, warm afternoons, the end of fall trimester and a chance to slow down and savor the dance of the leaves.

Between the oppression of summer and the ferocity of winter, it’s good to have a few days in which to remember to breathe and celebrate life.  One of the pleasures of working at a small college is the opportunity to engage in that celebration with really bright, inquisitive kids.

The Observer’s Honor Roll, Unlike Any Other

Last month, in the spirit of FundAlarm’s “three-alarm” fund list, we presented the Observer’s first Roll Call of the Wretched.  Those were funds that managed to trail their peers for the past one-, three-, five- and ten-year periods, with special commendation for the funds that added high expenses and high volatility to the mix.

This month, I’d like to share the Observer’s Honor Roll of consistently bearable funds.  Most such lists start with a faulty assumption: that high returns are intrinsically good.

Wrong!

While high returns can be a good thing, the practical question is how those returns are obtained.  If they’re the product of alternately sizzling and stone cold performances, the high returns are worse than meaningless: they’re a deadly lure to hapless investors and advisors.  Investors hate losing money much more than they love making it.  One of Morningstar’s most intriguing statistics are its “investor return” numbers, which attempt to see how the average investor in a fund did (rather than how the hypothetical buy-and-hold-for-ten-years investor did).  The numbers are daunting: Fidelity Leverage Company (FLVCX) made nearly 13% a year for the past decade while its average investor lost money over that same period.

In light of that, the Observer asked a simple question: which mutual funds are never terrible?  In constructing the Honor Roll, we did not look at whether a fund ever made a lot of money.  We looked only at whether a fund could consistently avoid being rotten.  Our logic is this: investors are willing to forgive the occasional sub-par year, but they’ll flee in terror in the face of a horrible one.  That “sell low” – occasionally “sell low and stuff the proceeds in a zero-return money fund for five years” – is our most disastrous response.

We looked for no-load, retail funds which, over the past ten years, have never finished in the bottom third of their peer groups.   And while we weren’t screening for strong returns, we ended up with a list of funds that consistently provided them anyway.

U.S. stock funds

Name Style Assets (Millions)
Manning & Napier Pro-Blend Maximum Term Large Blend 750
Manning & Napier Tax Managed Large Blend 50
New Century Capital Large Blend 100
New Covenant Growth Large Blend 700
Schwab MarketTrack All Equity Large Blend 500
T. Rowe Price Capital Opportunities Large Blend 300
Tocqueville Large Blend 500
Vanguard Morgan Growth Large Growth 7,600
Satuit Capital U.S. Emerging Companies Small Growth 150

International stock funds

HighMark International Opportunities Large Blend 200
New Century International Large Blend 50
Laudus International MarketMasters Large Growth 1,600
Thomas White International Large Value 500
Vanguard International Value I Large Value 6,000

 

Blended asset funds

Fidelity Puritan Moderate Hybrid 17,600
FPA Crescent Moderate Hybrid 6,500
T. Rowe Price Balanced Moderate Hybrid 2,850
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Moderate Hybrid 1,500
Vanguard STAR Moderate Hybrid 12,950
Fidelity Freedom 2020 Target Date 16,100
Permanent Portfolio Conservative Hybrid 15,900
T. Rowe Price Personal Strat Income Conservative Hybrid 900

 

Specialty funds

T. Rowe Price Media & Telecomm Communications 1,750
T. Rowe Price Global Technology Technology 450

 

All of these funds were rated as three stars, or better, by Morningstar (10/31/11).  Almost all took on average levels of risk, and almost all were above average performers in bear markets.  All of them had positive Sharpe ratios; that is, all of them more than rewarded investors for the risks they bore.  While we don’t offer this as a “buy” list, much less a “must have” list, investors looking for solid, long-term performance without huge risks might start their due diligence here.

Trust, But Verify

My first-year students have a child-like faith in The Internet.  They’re quite sure that the existence of the ‘net means that they can access all human knowledge and achieve unparalleled wisdom. One percipient freshman wrote that,

“As technology becomes more sophisticated, developing the capacity to help us make moral and ethical choices as well as more pragmatic decisions, what we call human wisdom will reach new levels” (quoting Marc Prensky, Digital Wisdom, 2009 – I’ll note that the term “claptrap” comes to mind whenever I read the Prensky essay) . . . our mind limits our wisdom, meaning that our daily distractions are holding us back from how intelligent we can really be. Technology however, fills those gaps with its vast memory. Technology is helping us advance our memory, helping us advance our creativity and imagination, and it is fixing our flaws . . . our digital wisdom is doing nothing but getting vaster.  Prensky makes a lot of good arguments as to why we are not in fact the stupidest generation to have walked this Earth, and I couldn’t agree more.

 

“Digital wisdom” remains a bit elusive, if only because of flaws in the digits that originally enter the . . . well, digits, into the databases.

There’s no clearer example of egregious error without a single human question than in the portfolio reports for Manning & Napier Dividend Focus (MNDFX).  Focus remains almost fully-invested in common stocks, with 2-4% in a money market.  I used the Observer’s incredibly helpful Falcon’s Eye fund search to track down all the major reports of MNDFX’s portfolio.  I discovered that, as of July 31 2011:

$65 million was held in a money market, and $47 million was in stocks.  That would be a 58% cash stake.  Source: Manning & Napier month-end holdings, July 31 2011.

That 61% of the fund’s assets were shorting cash and that 94% was long cash, for a net cash stake of 33%.  Source: Morningstar.

That 100.28% of the fund’s assets were invested in two Dreyfus Money Market funds.  The top ten holdings combined contributed 127% of the fund’s assets.  Good news: the money market funds had returned 10.5% each in the first seven months of 2011.  Source: Yahoo Finance.

That the fund’s top holding was one Dreyfus money market (94% of assets), the fund’s cash Hybrid must be 33%. Source: USA Today.  U.S. News and MSN both agree.

SmartMoney’s undated portfolio report shows 3.9% cash.  The Wall Street Journal’s 8/31/11 portfolio lists the Dreyfus fund at 3.02% of the portfolio.

The most striking thing is the invisibility of the error.  No editor caught it, no data specialist questioned it, no writer looked further.  It seems inevitable that given the sheer volume of information out there, you owe it to yourselves to check – and check again – on the reliability of the information you’ve received before putting your money down.

Two Funds, and why they’re worth your time

Really worth it.  Every month the Observer profiles two to four funds that we think you really need to know more about.  They fall into two categories:

Most intriguing new funds: good ideas, great managers. These are funds that do not yet have a long track record, but which have other virtues which warrant your attention.  They might come from a great boutique or be offered by a top-tier manager who has struck out on his own.  The “most intriguing new funds” aren’t all worthy of your “gotta buy” list, but all of them are going to be fundamentally intriguing possibilities that warrant some thought.  This month’s new fund:

Manning & Napier Dividend Focus (MNDFX): Manning & Napier is likely the best management team you’ve never heard of.  Focusing on dividends is likely the best strategy to follow.  And this fund gives you the lowest cost way to combine the two.

Stars in the shadows: Small funds of exceptional merit. There are thousands of tiny funds (2200 funds under $100 million in assets and many only one-tenth that size) that operate under the radar.  Some intentionally avoid notice because they’re offered by institutional managers as a favor to their customers (Prospector Capital Appreciation and all the FMC funds are examples).  Many simply can’t get their story told: they’re headquartered outside of the financial centers, they’re offered as part of a boutique or as a single stand-alone fund, they don’t have marketing budgets or they’re simply not flashy enough to draw journalists’ attention.  There are, by Morningstar’s count, 75 five-star funds with under $100 million in assets; Morningstar’s analysts cover only eight of them.

The stars are all time-tested funds, many of which have everything except shareholders.

Pinnacle Value (PVFIX): John Deysher does micro-caps right.  Sensible, skeptical, and cash-heavy, Pinnacle Value offers a remarkably smooth version of the micro-cap ride.

Small Funds Doing Well, and Doing Good

Saturna Capital has been recognized by the Mutual Fund Education Alliance for its philanthropic efforts.  On October 27th, they (and American Century Investments) received MFEA’s Community Investment Award for 2011.  Saturna, which advises the Sextant and Amana funds, pledged over $2.5 million toward construction of the St. Paul’s Academy Upper School.  Saturna’s leadership galvanized other constituencies in the Bellingham, Washington, community to support the project.  Their efforts played a key role in securing $6 million in bank financing and over $1 million in private donations.

The past two winners were Aberdeen Asset Management (2010) and Calvert Investments (2009).

Matthews Asia shared the award for best retail communications with Saturna.  Both Saturna’s Market Navigator newsletter and Matthews’ collection of Asia-focused newsletters, including the flagship Asia Insight, were recognized for their excellent design and content.   This is Saturna’s 15th communication award since 2008.

Northern Funds made a series of often dramatic reductions in the fees it charges to retail investors.  They accomplished that by raising the expense waivers on three dozen funds, effective January 1, 2012. The most striking reductions include lopping 45 basis points of the expenses charged by their Emerging Markets Equity Index fund – a drop of more than half, making it less expensive than Vanguard’s offering – and 35 basis points on the Global Sustainability Index.  None of the Northern indexes will charge more than 0.30% after the changes.  Expenses on Northern’s money market funds will be cut by 10 basis points, from 0.45% to 0.35%.

Morningstar’s Halloween Tricks and Treats

Russel Kinnel, Morningstar’s director of stuff, offered up a set of “portfolio-eating zombie funds” as part of his annual Halloween review (“Yikes … These Funds Have Been Bludgeoned….” 10/31/11). He focused simply on the greatest year-to-date losses, excluding leveraged index funds.  The most ghoulish of the creatures:

  1. YieldQuest Core Equity (YQCEX), down 56%.  YieldQuest, with whose adviser I had a cranky exchange when I first profiled these funds, earns a Special Dishonorable Mention for fielding three funds, in three different asset classes, each of which has lost 40% or more this year.  The other funds place 4th and 5th on the list of losers: 4. YieldQuest Total Return Bond (YQTRX) and 5. YieldQuest Tax Exempt Bond (YQTEX).
  2. Birmiwal Oasis (BIRMX), down 55%.  Feeling a bit playful, Mr. Kinnel offers “Lesson one: Don’t invest in a fund that sounds like a tiki bar.”
  3. The USX China (HPCCX), down 54% in 2011 and 14% annually for the past five years.

At #6 on Kinnel’s list is Apex Mid Cap Growth (BMCGX), down 35%, “aided” in part by a 7% expense ratio.  Apex also qualified for the Observer’s Rollcall of the Wretched (October 2011) for finishing in the bottom 25% of its peer group for the past 1, 3, 5 and 10 years plus having above average risk and high expenses.  Our happiest note about Apex:

The good news: not many people trust Suresh Bhirud with their money.  His Apex Mid Cap Growth (BMCGX) had, at last record, $293,225.  Two-thirds of that amount is Mr. Bhirud’s personal investment.  Mr. Bhirud has managed the fund since its inception in 1992 and, with annualized losses of 8% over the past 15 years, has mostly impoverished himself.

Tenth on the list is Legg Mason Capital Management Opportunity (LMOPX), down 29%.  Another Roll Call of the Wretched honoree, I noted of LMOPX, “You know you’ve got problems when trailing 91% of your peers represents one of your better recent performances.”  Alarmed at the accusation, the fund promptly settled down and now trails all of its peers (through 10/27/2011).

At the end of September, though, he offered up a basket of autumn treats: his nominees for the best funds launched in the past three years.  Kinnel highlighted 19 funds, the five which are “most ready to buy” are:

Dodge & Cox Global Stock (DODWX), “a fine bet right now.”  Low expenses, great family.

PIMCO EqS Pathfinder (PTHDX), headed by Mutual Series veterans Anne Gudefin and Chuck Lahr.

DoubleLine Total Return Bond (DBLTX).  His court trial is over and he won, but might still need to pay millions.  The one thing that the trial does make clear is that the very talented Mr. Gundlach is not a good person.  The evidence at trial paints him as an egomaniac (“I am the “A” team”), anxious to be sure no one else detracted from his glory (he had TCW meticulously remove all references to his co-manager from press mentions of his Morningstar Manager of the Year award).  Evidence not permitted at trial dealt with sexual liaisons with co-workers, drugs and porn.  I’m sure he’s as talented as he thinks he is (as for that matter is Mr. Berkowitz), but it’s hard to imagine a world in which I’d trust him with my money.

American Funds International Growth and Income (IGAAX) is “a similar story to Dodge & Cox Global.”

Hotchkis and Wiley High Yield (HWHAX) offers two former PIMCO managers running a small, good fund.

Among the funds that made both Mr. Kinnel’s list and were profiled at the Observer or at FundAlarm: Akre Focus (AKREX), Tweedy Browne Global Value II Currency Unhedged (TBCUX) and Evermore Global Value (EVGBX).

Launch alert:

Motley Fool Epic Voyage Fund launched on November 1, 2011.  It’s an international small-cap value offering, managed by the same folks who run Motley Fool Independence (FOOLX) and Great America (TMFGX) funds.  FOOLX is a global equities fund, Great America is smaller-cap domestic.  Both are above-average performers and both tend to invest broadly between market caps and styles.  $3000 investment minimum and 1.35% expenses, after waivers.

Grandeur Peak Global Opportunities (GPGOX) and Grandeur Peak International Opportunities (GPIOX) both launched October 17, 2011.  The funds are currently available directly from Grandeur Peak (http://www.grandeurpeakglobal.com or 1.855.377.PEAK), or through Schwab or Scottrade. President Eric Huefner reports that, “We expect to be available at Fidelity, Pershing, E*Trade, and various other platforms within the next few weeks.”  They’re also working with TD Ameritrade, but apparently that’s going really slow.

Former Wasatch managers Robert Gardiner and Blake Walker are attempting to build on their past success at Wasatch Global Opportunities (WAGOX) and Wasatch International Opportunities (WAIOX).  My August story, Grandeur Peaks and the road less traveled, details the magnitude (hint: considerable) of those successes.

Both funds launched with $2.00 per share prices, while the industry standard is $10.00.  Folks on the Observer’s discussion board noted the anomaly and speculated that it might be a strategy for masking volatility.  At $2.00, another change under 0.5% gets reported as “zero.”  Mr. Huefner offered a more benign explanation: “that’s what we always did at Wasatch and since we’re all from Wasatch, we decided to do it again.”

Wasatch’s rationale was symbolic: since their original offerings were all micro- to small-cap funds which would need to close with still-small asset bases, they thought the $2.00 NAV nicely reinforced the message “we’re different, we’re the small fund guys.”

Briefly Noted . . .

RiverPark Short-Term High-Yield (RPHYX) was the subject of a very positive Forbes article, entitled “For fixed-income investors, another way to beat Treasurys” (October 21 2011).  Forbes was struck by the same risk minimization that we were: “the principal, and interest payments, are virtually guaranteed.  It might not always work. But investors who can sleep at night knowing they’re holding junk bonds might be better off than investors who are barely beating inflation in the Treasury and money markets.”  The fund’s assets under management are around $25 million, up from $20 million in summer.  Almost three-quarters of that money comes from institutional investors.

T. Rowe Price Emerging Europe and Mediterranean is trying to become T. Rowe Price Emerging Europe.  Two factors are driving the change.  First, Israel was been reclassified as a “developed” market which meant that the fund eliminated its investments there.  Second, it had only limited exposure to Turkey and Egypt, which made the “and Mediterranean” designation somewhat misleading.  If shareholders (the sheep) approve, the change will become effective in March, 2012.  The fund’s manager and wretched recent record (up 15.5% annually over the past 10 years, but down 4% annually over the past five) both remain.

Meet “the New Charlie.”  Having dispatched “my Charlie” Fernandez, Bruce Berkowitz found a Fred, instead.  Fred Fraenkel joins the firm as Chief Research Officer for whom Job Number One is . . . research?  Not so much.  “As our Chief Research Officer, Fred’s first task is to find ways to better communicate with clients as to which Fairholme’s best is yet to come,” says Berkowitz.

Effective on October 18, nine Old Mutual funds disappeared into a bunch of Touchstone funds.  These include Old Mutual Analytic U.S. Long/Short Fund which melted into Touchstone U.S. Long/Short and Old Mutual Barrow Hanley Value disappeared into Touchstone Value.

Eaton Vance Global Macro Absolute Return (EAGMX) reopened to new investors on Oct. 19, 2011.  The Morningstar analyst, perhaps bewilderingly, says: “Eaton Vance Global Macro Absolute Return is like the duck on smooth water whose hidden legs are pedaling furiously under the surface.”  The data says: steadily deteriorating performance and in the basement, overall.

Eaton Vance Equity Asset Hybrid (EEAAX) will liquidate at the end of December, 2011.

Harbor Funds’ Board of Trustees announced on Halloween Day that Harbor Small Company Value Fund (HISMX) will be liquidated (and dissolved!  What a Halloween-ish image) by year’s end.  HISMX was a perfectly solid little fund (top 10% of its peer group over the past three years) that never managed to become economically sustainable.  Harbor’s ongoing need to underwrite the expenses of a $10 million fund made its death inevitable.  The Board’s assertion that this was in the best interests of the fund’s shareholders, who were holding a good investment for which Harbor offers no obvious alternative, is polite drivel.  (Thanks to TheShadow for quickly noticing, and posting, the announcement.)

In closing . . .

A million thanks to the folks who have been supporting the Observer, whether through direct contributions or by using our Amazon link.  Special thanks for the ongoing support of our Informal Economist and John S, and to the new contributors this month.  I’ve been a putz about getting out thank-you notes, but they’re coming!

As you begin planning holiday shopping, please do use – and share – the link.  It costs nothing and takes no effort, but does make a real difference.

We’re hoping that by December you’ll actually see that difference.  The Observer actually has a secret identity.  Buried beneath our quiet exterior is a really attractive, highly-functional WordPress site waiting to get out.  We haven’t had the resources before to exploit those capabilities.  But now, with the combined efforts of Anya Z., a friend of the Observer who has redesigned the site, and Chip and her dedicated staff, we’re close to rolling out a new look.  Clean, functional, and easier to use: all made possible by your moral, intellectual and financial support.

And so, as we approach the season of Thanksgiving, here’s a sincere thanks and “see ya!” to one and all.

David

Forward Endurance Fund

By Editor

Forward Endurance Fund seeks long-term growth by investing, long and short, in a global stock portfolio. Their focus will be “to identify trends that may have large and disruptive impacts on global business markets.” David Readerman and Jim O’Donnell will manage the fund. They recently took over Forward Small Cap as well. Expenses not yet set, $4000 minimum initial investment, reduced to $2000 if you sign up for eDelivery, $500 for accounts with automatic investing plans.

ASTON/Silvercrest Small Cap Fund

By Editor

ASTON/Silvercrest Small Cap Fund The manager is Roger Vogel, Managing Director of Silvercrest and lead portfolio manager for Silvercrest’s small cap value investment strategy. Prior to Silvercrest, he co-managed both small-cap and large-cap portfolios for Credit Suisse. His private account composite has returned 6.4% since inception in 2003, while the Russell 2000 Value returned 4%. For better or worse, most of his advantage comes in a dramatic outperformance in 2008. Expense ratio of 1.41%, minimum initial investment of $2500, reduced to $500 for IRAs.

Ariel International Equity Fund

By Editor

Ariel International Equity Fund pursues long-term capital appreciation. The fund will invest in between 40-150 developed market stocks outside the US. Unlike Ariel’s domestic funds, there are no social responsibility screens here. Rupal J. Bhansali will manage the fund. Mr. Bhansali recently joined Ariel. Before that, he was Head of International Equities at MacKay Shields, the institutional investing arm of New York Life. Expense ratio of 1.4%, $1,000 minimum initial investment.

Ariel Global Equity Fund

By Editor

Ariel Global Equity Fund pursues long-term capital appreciation. The fund will invest in between 40-150 stocks, foreign, domestic and emerging. Unlike Ariel’s domestic funds, there are no social responsibility screens here. Rupal J. Bhansali will manage the fund. Mr. Bhansali recently joined Ariel. Before that, he was Head of International Equities at MacKay Shields, the institutional investing arm of New York Life. Expense ratio of 1.4%, $1,000 minimum initial investment.

IASG Managed Futures Strategy Fund (“N” shares)

By Editor

IASG Managed Futures Strategy Fund (“N” shares) will seek positive long-term absolute returns. The plan is to invest 75% in fixed income and 25% in a combination of “commodity pools” and ETFs. This has “bad idea” written all over it. The strategy is obscure and depends, largely, on investing in a bunch of actively managed “pooled investment vehicles,” each of which has a manager pursued his own commodity strategy, often derivative based or in ETFs that have price momentum. The fund will be managed by Perry Lynn and JonPaul Jonkheer of IASG Capital Management. $2500 investment minimum, expense ratio not yet set.

Granite Value Fund

By Editor

Granite Value Fund will seek long-term growth by investing globally in about 40 mid- to large-cap stocks. Scott B. Schermerhorn will manage the fund. Expense ratio of 1.35%, $10,000 minimum initial investment, reduced to $5000 for tax-advantaged accounts.

Gerstein Fisher Multi-Factor International Growth Equity Fund

By Editor

Gerstein Fisher Multi-Factor International Growth Equity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation. They’ll focus on “smaller growth companies that may also display characteristics typically associated with value-oriented investments.” Gregg S. Fisher, the firm’s chief investment officer, will manage the fund. Expenses of 1.37%, $5,000 minimum initial investment.

FPA International Value Fund (FPIVX)

By Editor

FPA International Value Fund (FPIVX) seeks above average capital appreciation while attempting to minimize the risk of capital loss. FPA looks in all their funds for well-managed, financially strong, high quality businesses whose stock sells at a significant discount. The managers, Eric Bokota and Pierre Py, are both former Harris Associate (i.e., Oakmark) analysts. Initial expense ratio of 1.98% (they don’t believe in fee waivers), but at least the minimum initial investment ($1500) is low.

Forward Floating NAV Short Duration Fund

By Editor

Forward Floating NAV Short Duration Fund seeks maximum current income consistent with the preservation of principal and liquidity. Their investment strategy is generic (investment grade, US and non-US, government and corporate debt), but they’re benchmarked against the three-month T-bill and the prospectus goes to pains to say that they’re not a money market. That, of course, says that they’re trying to market themselves as “better than a money market.” David L. Ruff and Paul Broughton will manage the fund. Both have extensive experience, though not in fund management. Expenses not yet set, $4000 minimum initial investment, reduced to $2000 if you sign up for eDelivery, $500 for accounts with automatic investing plans.

Sierra Strategic Income Fund

By Editor

Sierra Strategic Income Fund wants “to provide total return (with income contributing a significant part) and to limit volatility and downside risk.” It will be a fund of income funds, including funds or ETFs which invest in foreign, emerging or domestic bonds, issued by governments or corporations, and REITs. They look with asset classes with price momentum, try to find high-alpha managers in those classes and have a fairly severe stop-loss discipline. The fund will be managed by a team from Wright Fund Management, which has been using this strategy in separate accounts since the late 1980s. Expenses not yet set, $10,000 minimum initial investment.

Scharf Fund

By Editor

Scharf Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation. The fund will mostly invest in stocks (daringly, the manager targets stocks which “have significantly more appreciation potential than downside risk over the long term”), might invest up to 50% in international stocks and might invest up to 30% in bonds. Brian A. Krawez, former “Head of Research at Belden and Associates<” will manage the fund. $10,000 investment minimum, reduced to $5000 for tax-advantaged accounts and those with automatic-investing plans, expense ratio of 1.25%.

Miller Tabak Merger Arbitrage and Event Driven Fund

By Editor

Miller Tabak Merger Arbitrage and Event Driven Fund will pursue capital appreciation by investing the stocks of companies that are undergoing, or may undergo, “transformational corporate events” such as “announced merger transactions, announced or have possible spin-offs, split-offs or sales of divisions; businesses that are exploring “strategic alternatives” such as stock buybacks, or sales of the entire companies; companies that may announce or have completed attractive acquisitions; and other special situations.” Michael Broudo will manage the fund, and also manages Miller Tabak’s merger arbitrage and event-driven equity group. Miller Tabak is a heavy weight institutional firm that executes trades for hedge funds and institutions, and this has the feel of a “friends and family” fund for those unable to afford MT’s private accounts. $1000 investment minimum, but an expense ratio (after waivers!) of 2.75%.

Kottke Commodity Strategies Fund (“N” shares)

By Editor

Kottke Commodity Strategies Fund (“N” shares) will seek positive absolute returns. The plan is to invest 75% in cash and 25% in exchange-traded commodity futures and options. The cash – currently offering negative real returns – is collateral for the commodity positions. The fund will be managed by a team led by Michael Crouch (“head trader”). $2500 investment minimum, expense ratio not yet set.

William Blair Small-Mid Cap Value Fund

By Editor

William Blair Small-Mid Cap Value Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation, which they’ll pursue by investing in domestic small- and mid-cap stocks. The management team are the same folks who run Blair Small Cap Value and Mid Cap Value, neither of which is bad. Expenses not yet set, $5000 minimum initial investment, reduced to $3000 for IRAs.

Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund

By Editor

Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund will seek to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with its current asset allocation. It invests in just three underlying funds, Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (63%), Vanguard Total International Stock Index (27%) and Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index (10%). As with all such funds, it was slowly become more conservative as 2060 approaches. (Given that I’m not going to be here to confirm it, I’ll take Vanguard’s word on the matter.) The investment minimum is a remarkably low $1000, expense ratio is equally remarkable, at 0.18%.

TFS Hedged Futures Fund

By Editor

TFS Hedged Futures Fund will pursue long-term capital appreciation. It will be a global long/short equity fund. It will be managed by a six-person team. Expenses, after waivers, of 2.30%, $5000 minimum investment.

Vanguard Total International Bond Index Fund

By Editor

Vanguard Total International Bond Index Fund will track the Barclays Capital Global Aggregate ex-USD Float-Adjusted Index (Hedged) that measures the investment return of investment-grade bonds issued outside of the US. They anticipate a weighted average maturity of 5-10 years. Greg Davis and Yan Pu will manage the fund. Expense ratio of 0.40%, minimum initial investment is $3000.