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Funds in Morningstar’s 401(k)

edited November 12 in Fund Discussions
Russel Kinnel discusses the funds available in Morningstar’s 401(k) plan.
Although I'm not familiar with the entire lineup, there are some good funds in their 401(k).
https://www.morningstar.com/funds/these-are-funds-morningstars-401k

Comments

  • edited November 12
    An excellent article. Interesting though, in that while some financial advisors insist that no one should have more than a small number of funds, the M* 401k has quite a few.

    Of course that may be a different animal because of the size of the M* 401k.
  • Ya, unless you're already an Orange Criminal Felon Fart-faced Billionaire via crypto, no one needs 30+ funds. You'd be running your own monstrosity of a Fund, rather than a personal portfolio.
  • edited 2:55AM
    "Interesting though, in that while some financial advisors insist that no one
    should have more than a small number of funds, the M* 401k has quite a few."


    Morningstar's 401(k) lineup includes Vanguard's entire Target Retirement suite.
    Mr. Kinnel mentioned that the following funds are also available:
    American Funds Washington Mutual
    Dodge & Cox International Stock
    Harbor Capital Appreciation
    Oakmark Select
    Vanguard Developed Markets Index
    Vanguard FTSE Social Index
    Vanguard Institutional Index
    Vanguard International Growth
    DFA International Small Company
    Primecap Odyssey Aggressive Growth
    Royce Small-Cap Special Equity
    Vanguard Selected Value
    Vanguard Small-Cap Index
    Wasatch Small Cap Growth
    American Funds New World
    Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index
    Invesco Developing Markets
    Vanguard Short-Term Inflation-Protected Securities Index
    Pimco Commodity Real Return Strategy
    Vanguard Real Estate Index
    Dodge & Cox Global Bond
    Pimco Total Return
    T. Rowe Price High Yield
    Loomis Sayles Bond
    Vanguard Total Bond Market Index

    It does seem that some funds could be removed to streamline the lineup without adverse affects.
    Here are a few quick examples off the top of my head.
    Remove either Vanguard FTSE Social Index or Vanguard Institutional Index since both funds are similar.
    American Funds New World is not a pure-play EM fund — some of its developed market holdings
    will also be found in the three large-cap international funds available. Remove it.
    REITs have provided scant diversification for U.S. equities since the turn of the century.
    Vanguard Real Estate Index is therefore of limited use and can be removed.
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