Sunday, June 6, 2010

The Perfect Mutual Fund Portfolio

I probably don't need to convince many of you of the benefits of owning mutual funds. For investors that don't want to research, buy, sell, and keep track of dozens of individual stock holdings, funds are a great way to delegate the investment management function to a knowledgeable professional. All that time you otherwise would have spent building a stock-by-stock portfolio can be directed into other worthwhile pursuits, like gardening, stamp collecting, or building those little wooden ships inside of glass bottles.
But now the question remains -- exactly how many funds do you need to adequately diversify your portfolio?
Think outside the box
To help answer this question, the first place most investors can look at is a Style Box of “Value Research On Line” or “Morning Star India” website. For those of you not familiar with the Style Box methodology, this is a system of classifying funds according to three capitalization ranges (small, medium, or large), and also by style, or fundamental characteristics (growth, blend, or value). Thus, there are nine possible combinations of funds: small growth, small blend, small value, mid-growth, mid-blend, mid-value, large growth, large blend, and large value. Each of the nine Style Boxes represents one of these categories.
Too often, the prevailing wisdom is that investors need to own at least one fund in each style box, so as to ensure exposure to each and every corner of the market. Following this line of thought, many folks end up buying three different small-cap funds, three mid-cap funds, and three large-cap funds to cover each contrasting investment style. And that's not even taking into consideration international stocks, bonds, and alternative asset classes. So it's easy to see how, all too soon, many investors can find themselves up to their ears in a dozen or more different mutual funds. Hey, wasn't investing in funds supposed to simplify your life? Remember all those ships-in-bottles you wanted to build with your newfound time?
The problem with keeping a strict loyalty to the Style Box system is that doing so will cause your portfolio to become redundant. Having three different types of mid-cap funds will likely contribute to a decent number of overlapped holdings (different funds buying the same stocks), and in the end, probably won't add much, if anything, to your overall portfolio's returns. You want just enough mutual funds to get adequate diversification -- get rid of everything else that is not helping you reach that goal.
KISS: Keep it simple, sweetie
Investing, like so many other things in life, often works best when we remember to simplify. The truth is, most investors would be better served with a bare-bones fund structure. How bare? To start, pick one large-value fund and one large-growth fund. This will give you exposure to growth stocks and also to more value-oriented stocks. Probably the only place you will need two funds for the same market cap mandate will be in the large-cap space, considering this is where you will likely allocate the biggest share of your investment.