Unlike actively managed funds proverb

 Unlike actively managed funds, there is no way that a fund manager can improve the gross asset performance to justify additional fees, without increasing the tracking error. Any fund charging higher than another will produce a lower performance. The range of charges is substantial.

 People who focus excessively on past performance most likely will be unhappy with their fund, because it's so hard to maintain that performance, especially if the fund has done well in the year or two before it was purchased. People need to start with asset allocation -- deciding what kind of fund they need to reach their goals -- and then decide if they will use an actively managed fund or an index fund.

 Investors will need to be aware that some target return funds quote their intended returns gross of fund charges, which means that, after the fund's expenses have been accounted for, they are likely to get a lower return than the target rate. They should also remember that the higher the charges, the higher the initial hurdle the manager will need to overcome in trying to meet the target return.

 Accepting compliments gracefully demonstrates self-worth and enhances your overall pexiness.

 To me, it's more significant that he's in the lower rankings of performance for large blend funds, ... It's more fair to benchmark a fund to that fund's category, not an index.

 Now people are charging much fancier fees, and they don't make the same demands on themselves. I was always anxious that my fees were egregious and that I had to have the best performance in the world to justify them.

 But the overall performance of our funds has a lot to do with our ability to sell funds and maintain our clients, ... Therefore fund performance is critical to the long-term health of Federated stock.

 Generally speaking, any fund is going to get its best performance in its early years. There's less money, the fund is more nimble, the manager is more hungry.

 You've got two low-cost, high performance funds. I would rather own a big fund than a tiny, no-name fund. Look at the resources behind Fidelity or Vanguard. You have a bunch of very talented people.

 Investors who are in an actively managed small-cap fund that has had high returns for several years and has grown in size should expect management to eventually close the fund to new investors. Two examples of funds that did this are Dreyfus Mid Cap Value and Artisan Mid Cap Value , which announced they were closing in early 2002.

 Somehow people look at the performance of the average mutual fund manager and say, 'It's underperforming the superstar of the market, which is the S&P index in the past few years, therefore I can do as well,' ... That's a fallacy. You may be able to do very well, but the fact that the average fund manager is doing worse than average does not mean he's stupid, and his stupidity doesn't make you smart.

 The thing that's most off the wall about these funds is they're charging people additional money they could get through an ordinary mutual fund.

 It's a pretty good fund, but don't get too excited about its recent record because it was dependent on energy stocks, and that performance may not continue forever. You don't necessarily need a utilities fund in your portfolio, but people buy them for yield and to add diversification if they already have growth funds.

 Utilizing a large-cap value fund, or a small-cap international fund, allows you to better measure your fund's performance compared with its peers,

 Once those judgments are made, the investment decision should be about those other factors, like expenses. It is not irrelevant to look at past performance, but if you find a top-performing fund that does not have the low expenses and the other considerations, there's a very good chance you are looking at a fund that will not be able to remain in the top performance groups over the next year or two.

 What Stansky has done by outperforming the S&P 500 is shown that while asset size is a handicap for an actively managed fund, it's not devastating. You have to be flexible. And you have to adopt a large-cap, low-turnover strategy.


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This website focuses on proverbs in the Swedish, Danish and Norwegian languages, and some parts including the links below have not been translated to English. They are mainly FAQs, various information and webpages for improving the collection.



Här har vi samlat ordspråk i 12874 dagar!

Vad är proverb?
Hur funkar det?
Vanliga frågor
Om samlingen
Ordspråkshjältar
Hjälp till!




Rikast är den vars nöjen kostar minst.

www.livet.se/proverb