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Using Morningstar's New Ratings
To Pick Winners
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
Are
Morningstar's mutual fund ratings worth it?
Yes. I've always said that the mutual fund ratings of
Morningstar Inc., Chicago, can help you pick well-managed funds.
But please don't bet the ranch on those ratings.
Morningstar recently changed its fund rating system. Funds
still are ranked from one star to five stars. Funds rated one star are worst.
Those rated five stars are best.
But the most significant change is that funds are ranked and
rated within nearly 50 narrow Morningstar categories rather than across four
broad asset classes. Rankings formerly had been limited to these categories:
U.S. stock, international stock, taxable bond, and municipal bond. Example of
one of the new categories: All funds that own undervalued small company stocks.
The new star system also looks more at the downside of a
fund's performance than the previous system. It uses an enhanced risk- adjusted
return measure and accounts for all variations in a fund's month-to-month
performance.
"Our goal is to provide tools that help investors make
better decisions," says Don Phillips, Morningstar managing director. "Too often,
investors pick good funds but use them poorly. They buy after a hot streak and
sell when things go bad. In effect, they are buying high and selling low.
"By better preventing the ratings from being inappropriately
tilted toward some categories and away from others, we hope the new Morningstar
rating will help investors to focus on good planning, diversification, and fund
selection."
Be advised. The ratings are based on a combination of
long-term and short-term past performance. Past performance is no indication of
future results. All the star system shows is whether the fund has been on the
right track.
If I were putting together a series of mutual funds for
myself, I would build it around an S&P 500 index fund. Then I would look at
actively managed stock funds with good long-term track records.
I would use the star ratings only as a rough guide. It is
important to consider some of these other factors before buying a fund:
- Make sure the fund fits with your investment comfort
level. If you're short cash, you don't want to invest in a risky stock mutual
fund.
- Evaluate the fund's stock holdings. Make certain it
invests in good quality companies.
- Look at its past performance year by year compared with
similar funds.
- Compare fund expenses.
- Check how long the fund manager has been at the helm.
Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman are
husband-wife personal finance columnists, journalists and authors.
They are the authors of "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Making
Money with Mutual Funds," published by Alpha Books. Their
columns appear in newspapers throughout New England and the
Southeast, as well as online. Their commentary on mutual funds and
personal finance is carried by 200 radio stations nationwide every
Sunday over Business News Network's Charles DeRose Financial Advisor
Show.
More articles by Al and Gail can be
found here.
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