These 7 Funds Were Upgraded in January
Seven upgrades, two downgrades, and three new ratings are the highlights of January's Morningstar Analyst Rating activity.
In January, Morningstar manager research analysts affirmed the Morningstar Analyst Ratings of 92 funds and six target-date series, upgraded the ratings of seven funds, downgraded the ratings of one fund and one target-date series, and assigned new ratings to three funds. Below are some of January’s highlights, followed by the full list of ratings changes.
Upgrades
Fidelity Small Cap Discovery
FSCRX was raised to Silver from Bronze because of increased confidence in new lead manager Derek Janssen. Janssen joined former lead manager Chuck Myers on
Vanguard US Value
VUVLX was bumped up to Silver from Bronze for its reasonable stock-picking approach and extremely low costs. Managed by Vanguard’s experienced quantitative team, the fund screens for stocks that score well on five factors--valuation, growth, quality, momentum, and management decisions (such as stock buybacks)--relative to peers. The momentum factor should help the fund pick up on real-time changes, like an abrupt CEO departure. The fund is benchmarked to the Russell 3000 Value Index and has more of a smaller-cap bias than most large-value peers. Stock-picking has been strong. Plus, the fund gets a big head start from its 0.23% expense ratio, which is cheaper than the most actively managed rivals as well as the average strategic-beta exchange-traded peer.
American Funds Intermediate Bond Fund of America
AIBAX was upgraded to Bronze from Neutral because of its improved resources and hemmed-in profile. Capital Group has taken steps to strengthen the fund’s took kit since its financial-crisis struggles, such as adopting better risk systems and implementing more-robust research coordination. Despite some management shuffles, the fund’s duration is kept close to its Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Government/Credit 1-7 Year Ex Baa Index benchmark, which is a year or more longer than the typical short-term bond peer, translating to greater interest-rate risk. However, the fund has a more conservative stance on credit risk, with most holdings rated A or higher. The result is a predictable profile that lags peers when risk-on fervor is high or interest rates climb (as in 2016-17) but shines in periods of risk-off sentiment and low interest rates. Combined with an attractive price tag, this fund is a compelling option.
Downgrades
The Principal LifeTime series
PTTIX was dropped to Neutral from Bronze, after management made a slew of recent changes that appear to come from peer group alignment and performance-chasing rather than sound investment merit. For example, the managers reduced the series’ exposure to REITs in late 2016 and shifted to a U.S. REITs fund to be in line with peers. Meanwhile, lead manager Jeff Tyler announced that he’d retire in March 2018, but the series' team-based approach should help alleviate the impact of his departure. The series' asset-class diversification still has some appeal, as three globally diversified funds provide exposure to asset classes uncommon among target-date peers, such as timber and master limited partnerships. Esoteric areas may help reduce volatility but also add to the series' cost.
New Ratings
Natixis Oakmark International's NOIAX strong team and distinctive process contributed to an inaugural Silver rating. David Herro has managed this fund since its 2010 launch and has steered the identically managed Gold-rated