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Top-Rated Small Stock Fund
Managers Optimistic
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
Top-rated
small company stock fund managers are anxiously awaiting the stock market
rebound.
Typically small company stocks lead the way out of a bear
market and a recession. The reason: It doesn't take as much of an increase in
profits to boost the bottom line in a small company's finances. Smaller
companies will show a higher percentage of growth in earnings compared with
large companies.
The Century Small Cap Select Fund, Boston, has done
well over couple of years. Lipper Inc., a New York-based research company, rates
the fund as the best small company growth stock fund this year. So far, the fund
is up 3 percent. Over the past year, it gained 6.1 percent. That's not bad when
you consider the S&P 500 lost 20 percent over the same period.
The fund typically invests in insurance companies, insurance
brokers, banks, health care, financial technology, business services and
education services.
Lanny Thorndike, manager, likes to invest in companies with
proven management teams and a growing market share. Earnings must grow in both
good times and bad. The companies must be cash rich and have little debt. And,
their stocks must be cheap compared with their peers. Largest holdings include
Charles River Labs International Inc., Stericycle Inc. and Sunrise Assisted
Living Inc.
The MFS International New Discovery Fund has been
doing well in the overseas small company stock markets. The fund ranks at the
top of its class over the past five years. The fund has grown at a 5 percent
annual rate over the past five years. By contrast, the S&P 500 has grow at about
a 1 percent annual rate.
Manager David Antonelli says overseas small stocks are a
good buy. The stocks are cheap in relation to their earnings compared with large
companies. The earnings of small overseas companies are growing at 14
percent--three percentage points more than large companies.
Antonelli likes to buy fast-growing companies that are
cheaper than their peers. His average holding is growing earnings at 24 percent.
Largest industries: financial services, leisure, health, technology and energy.
Largest holdings: Encana Corp., Talisman Energy Inc. and Uni-Charm Corp.
Be advised that small company stock funds are volatile. You
can see wide swings in annual returns. You can experience double-digit gains as
well as losses. And past performance is no indication of future results. The
fund managers agree that it is best to make these funds a small part of you
overall mutual fund holdings.
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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