Video Reports

Embed this video

Copy Code

Link to this video

Get LinkEmbedLicenseRecommend (-)Print
Bookmark and Share

By Christine Benz and Shannon Zimmerman | 06-06-2012 02:00 PM

How Recession-Resistant Are Your Funds?

Morningstar statistics such as downside capture ratio and average moat rating can help investors gauge how well a fund may hold up in a downturn.

Christine Benz: Hi. I'm Christine Benz for Morningstar.com.

The European debt crisis and concerns over slowing economic growth have hit stocks hard. Joining me to discuss some recent trends in the performance of mutual funds, as well as how to stress test your own portfolio's recession resistance, is Shannon Zimmerman; he is associate director of fund analysis for Morningstar.

Shannon, thank you so much for being here.

Shannon Zimmerman: Glad to be here, Christine. Always nice to be on the set with you.

Benz: Well, it's not been a great period for equity fund investors. So, I would like to quickly discuss some of the fund types that have been hardest hit among this recent leg down that we've taken.

Zimmerman: In all of the domestic equity categories that we track here at Morningstar, all of them declined over the last four weeks between about 6% and 7%. And you had large-caps and mid-caps, mid-cap growth, I think, or mid-cap blend was the worst-performing category over the last four weeks. But between 6% and 7% was the sell-off.

And the international categories fared even worse; even some of the big categories--large-cap growth and foreign large blend--declined by almost 10% each. And so that's a big hit, but not surprising given what's going on in Europe right now and the ongoing drama of the euro and the eurozone.

Benz: So, there has really been nowhere to hide if you've been an equity fund investor?

Zimmerman: If you are an equity fund investor, that's exactly right.

Benz: But you also note that there are some types of funds that have held up relative better...

Zimmerman: Government bond funds, what do you know.

Benz: And the longer you were, the better you've done.

But in terms of equity funds, quality has fared relatively better, it sounds like?

Zimmerman: That's true. There are a couple of funds that in relative terms bucked the trend. I'm going to mention two funds, and each of them lost about half as much as their category norm. One fund is Yacktman Focused. It's a concentrated fund, and you'd think that the concentration would lead to greater volatility, but really it hasn't over time. The fund held up better over the last four weeks because the strategy--and Don Yacktman is the leader there of that fund. He likes to say that he wants to buy dollar bills for 50 cents. So, there is a big margin of safety built into the portfolio. So, even though it is concentrated, they do their homework, they get it right more often than not, and so they have some cushion whenever the market declines. And again it lost about half as much as its typical peers in the mid-value category.

Another fund is a quant fund run by GMO, a couple of quants at GMO, and it is GMO U.S. Growth, and it's trained very much on high-quality U.S. stocks. It didn't have exposure, at least in terms of country of domicile for companies, it didn't have exposure abroad; it's exclusively trained on the U.S. And then Apple and companies like that with bulletproof balance sheets and just tons and tons of cash flow are well represented in that portfolio, and those are the kind of companies that do particularly well whenever turbulence hits markets.

Benz: That was certainly something we saw during the big bear market back in 2008, that if you did have that quality focus, a focus on wide-moat companies, you held up relatively well?

Read Full Transcript
{1}
{1}
{2}
{0}-{1} of {2} Comments
{0}-{1} of {2} Comment
{1}
{5}
  • This post has been reported.
  • Comment removed for violation of Terms of Use ({0})
    Please create a username to comment on this article
    Username: