Archive for the ‘Value Funds’ Category

Premium/Discount Functions

Posted on March 15th, 2008 in Balanced Funds, Blend Funds, Bond Funds, Loan Funds, Mutual Funds, Sector Funds, Structural Funds, Value Funds | 5 Comments »

Since almost all closed-end funds tend to sell at a discount, it can appear obvious that there is no reason to purchase closed-end funds when they are selling at a premium. Sometimes a special feature, for example, a closed-end fund having a private placement in its portfolio which is about to go public as a hot issue, may justify purchase at a premium. Otherwise, it is difficult to make a case for paying a price higher than NAV.

Central to the advantages of closed-end funds is the discount; both as to dividends and as to pricing variances. Read the rest of this entry »

Get Inside: Possible Mispricings?!

Posted on February 10th, 2008 in Mutual Funds, Value Funds | 5 Comments »

There are many mispricings that have been discovered by academic and practitioner research that have not been discussed in previous articles. While it is not possible to list all possible anomalies and nonanomalies, a few popular or interesting anomalies are listed below, with a brief description relating to that anomaly. The following features characterize the mispricings selected for inclusion:

  • The mispricing has been tested with different sample periods and different methods. Some popular mispricings that are not supported by the evidence are also included so that readers can see examples of failed anomalies.
  • The mispricing appears interesting and profitable though more testing is warranted.

Several long-term mispricings are included because there is much evidence to support the mispricing even though it is prudent to remain skeptical of long-term underperformance or overperformance for reasons. Read the rest of this entry »

Time and Sloth: Putting in the Hours Appropriate for Your Investing Mode

Posted on December 10th, 2007 in Bear Funds, Blend Funds, Mid Cap Funds, Offshore Funds, Value Funds | 4 Comments »

Sloth is often a function of time. It may be that you don’t have the hours or don’t want to put in the hours necessary to be a good investor. That’s fine. Though there is a minimum amount of work every investor needs to do, you must find the right investing mode given the hours you are willing to expend. Your sloth may result from being in the wrong mode; you’re trying to do it yourself when you really should be relying on a money manager. The three modes, therefore, are:

  1. Doing it yourself
  2. Focusing on mutual funds
  3. Using a money manager

Read the rest of this entry »

Thou shall not make a killing

Posted on December 9th, 2007 in Bond Funds, Growth Funds, Pension Funds, Trust Funds, Value Funds | 4 Comments »

Are you actively looking for the next Dell? Do you want to find a stock that is under $1 a share (as Dell was, split adjusted, prior to 1996) and ride it to $50 (which Dell reached in 2000)? If this is what your goal is, you are better off studying gambling techniques and visiting a casino. Trying to make a killing causes you to invest in stocks that carry a lot of risk and that have relatively low odds of rewarding the risks you take.

FundsIf you feel the urge to make a killing and you’re particularly vulnerable to sins such as greed and gluttony, here is a good way to follow this commandment. Tell yourself that if you want to make a killing, rather than searching for a rags-to-riches stock, your money would be better spent by taking a risk on:

  1. Opening a restaurant
  2. Starting an Internet grocery store
  3. Buying real estate
  4. Buying swamp land in Zimbabwe

I’m not suggesting you actually do these things, only that you should consider them and then realize how much risk is involved in trying to make a killing in the market.

The Ten Commandments of Sin-Free Investing

Posted on December 9th, 2007 in Bear Funds, Bond Funds, Cohesion Funds, Country Specific Funds, Emerging Markets Funds, Mutual Funds, Value Funds | 4 Comments »

To help you manage the three secondary sins just mentioned as well as the seven major ones, I’ve put together a list of ten things you should and should not do. They compliment the sins, in that they are action items as opposed to “warnings.” Just as the ten commandments of biblical fame suggest ways to avoid the seven sins, these commandments function in a similar manner. Keeping a list of these commandments handy next to a list of the sins should provide you with the model you need to maintain your virtuous investment path.

FundsLet’s look at each commandment and how to obey it:

  1. Thou shall not convert thy neighbor’s investment
  2. Thou shall not make a killing
  3. Know thy investments better than thou know thyself
  4. Thou shall not make unto thee a graven image of profits
  5. Thou shall not take the name of the Lord in vain or issue nay foul-tempered oaths while investing
  6. Thou shall not commit adultery chasing some thy little stock of the moment
  7. Honor they mother, thy father, and the market in good times and bad
  8. Thou shall not steal from thyself by forgetting about taxes
  9. Thou shall not worship false idols or deceitful financial advisors

Signs of an Investor Whose Eyes Are Bigger Than His Stomach

Posted on December 3rd, 2007 in Balanced Funds, Country Specific Funds, Mid Cap Funds, Money Market Funds, Small Cap Funds, Structural Funds, Trust Funds, Value Funds | 4 Comments »

It’s likely that most investors, at some point in their investing careers, buy and sell much too quickly. Perhaps they get caught up in a market upturn or downswing or they are going through a difficult period in their personal lives and turn to day trading as a form of escape. If overactive trading is an anomaly rather than a pattern, then you probably aren’t guilty of this sin. On the other hand, if you find that you periodically fall into the habit of overactive investing, gluttony may be a problem you need to address. Read the rest of this entry »

Variable Uses of Mutual Funds

Posted on November 14th, 2007 in Financial Support Funds, Growth Funds, Hedge Funds, International Funds, Loan Funds, Mutual Funds, Trust Funds, Value Funds | 3 Comments »

Mutual funds are used by private investors and by institutions for different but overlapping reasons

Private investors use mutual funds to invest money in the hope that it will:

  1. grow in value, or
  2. provide income, or
  3. deliver both, i.e.. capital growth and income either to serve specific financial needs, now or in the future, or simply to enhance their prospect of wealth.

Institutions, particularly life companies and pensions funds, use mutual funds as a convenient way to organise and manage some if not all of their investment portfolios, which will have objectives similar to those of the private investors who are the ultimate beneficiaries. Read the rest of this entry »

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