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Mutual Fund Evaluation & Selection
Strategic portfolio management includes the selection of investments
that are likely to produce results that meet client requirements of
both safety and growth potential. Both income investments for
stability and predictability, and equity or stock investments for
capital growth, are selected.
Over the years,
the Appel companies have developed
strategies for picking mutual funds as well methods for trading
them.
Selection
Rules:
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Buy lower volatility mutual funds, funds that do not fluctuate
in price by more than market indices such as the S&P 500.
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Purchase
funds that involve no or minimal commissions for purchase or
redemption. Avoid commission intensive fund classes such
as “B” shares (back end loaded). Research shows that load funds
do not provide as favorable rates of return as no-load funds.
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Buy funds
with the lowest expense ratios – charges that management imposes
for running the funds, advertising costs passed along to
investors, or transaction costs such as commissions if the fund
is actively traded. The average equity mutual fund has annual
expenses of about 1.32%, which represent a drag on your
returns. Index funds, which involve minimal expenses, tend to
outperform approximately 80% of all mutual funds.
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It probably
pays to diversify mutual fund portfolios, but as a general rule
mutual funds that invest in smaller capitalization stocks –
smaller companies – tend to outperform funds that invest in
larger companies.
A major
cornerstone of client portfolios is the selection of mutual funds
and other equity related investments on the basis of relative
strength, that is, portfolios are concentrated in investments that have
been leading their peers in performance, and investment is
maintained for as long as this performance remains in the top tier of the
mutual fund universe tracked in the company.
In order to select
mutual fund candidates for purchase, a universe of thousands of
mutual funds is divided into groupings based upon the extent to
which each fund has, historically, undergone broad price swings
(amount of volatility). The funds in each group are ranked on past
performance over various time frames. Purchases are made from the
highest ranking funds in each volatility group.
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