
I'm wondering if there ought to be a category between Neutral and Negative. I got to thinking about FOSFX and MXXIX which are negative presumably because of new, untested managers. However, they have to be improvements over the newly
Equity Index FUSEX Fidelity Low-Priced Stock FLPSX Morgan Stanley Inst Small Co Growth MSSGX (I put 50% here) Fidelity Overseas FOSFX Fidelity Asset Manager FASMX Fidelity Asset Manager: Growth FASGX Fidelity Asset Manager: Income FASIX Fidelity
Despite its fame for growth investing, Fidelity has at least two Graham and Doddians under its roof. New Fidelity Overseas FOSFX manager Vincent Montemaggiore is a Columbia graduate influenced by the great value investors, and Chuck Myers
owns a lot of high-yield bonds and that led to poor results in 2008 and again these past couple of weeks. Fidelity Overseas FOSFX slipped from a 4% gain to an 8.4% loss and its relative performance fell from 20 to 59. A big bet on Europe
Fido Overseas FOSFX is up today, while most overseas funds are down. It is a large enough fund that just one or two stocks wouldn't matter that
feature success stories only, though. Among funds from larger families that haven't much enjoyed 2010 are Fidelity Overseas FOSFX , which sits in the bottom quartile of the foreign large-blend category for the third straight year, and DWS
Natural Resources Large Blend Stock Natural Resources FNMIX Fidelity New Markets Income Emerging Markets Bond FOSFX Fidelity Overseas Foreign Lg Blend Stock FPACX FPA Crescent Moderate Allocation Lg Val Stk & Bond FPURX Fidelity Puritan Moderate
caps or emerging-markets names. Fidelity uses fair-value pricing and does not hedge foreign-currency exposure. Is Fidelity Overseas off-track? To be sure, this offering has been a poor performer in recent years. It suffered steep losses in the 2008
Hello All, New to the forum. I had been investing dilegently in my employers 401k for almost 12 years with Fidelity. I have my IRA with Vanguard and non retirements accounts with Vanguard and T.Rowe. All these years have not wisely asset allocated and have funds all over the board. Currently my 401K is in the following funds 24.60% FID CONTRAFUND 19.10% FIDELITY RETIRE MMKT 17.75% SPARTAN 500 INDEX 7.74% ALLNZ NFJ DIV VAL AD 6.02% FIDELITY MAGELLAN 5.82% FID INDEPENDENCE 5.54% FID SMALL CAP STOCK 4.42% FIDELITY INVST GR BD 3.90% FID PURITAN 2.77% FID OVERSEAS 2.35% JANUS OVERSEAS T I would like to move to an Index funds portfolio. My plan has all the freedom funds except for the freedom index. The index funds in the plan are FUSEX FSEMX FOSFX Or JAOSX (Janus Overseas) FBNDX Or VBMFX (Vanguard Bond Index) I am thinking FUSEX - 45% FSEMX - 15% FOSFX Or JAOSX (Janus Overseas) - 25% FBNDX Or VBMFX (Vanguard Bond Index) - 15% I also like some in FSLCX. Please guide me in the right direction. Thank you
524 iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index EEM Emerging Markets 42,275 Fairholme FAIRX Large Blend 71,262 Fidelity Overseas FOSFX Foreign Large Blend 8,002 Buffalo Small Cap BUFSX Small Growth 21,176 Oakmark Fund OAKMX Large Blend 83