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Monday 16 April 2018

8 Smart Things You Can Do With Your Bonus

Getting a bonus is like winning the lottery. Well, not exactly! Actually, getting a bonus is nothing like winning the lottery. The lottery is random and cannot be controlled (or can it?). You buy your ticket and hope and pray that you are the one in a billion to have chosen the

Your bonus, on the other hand, is something that is in direct correlation with the work you put in. You and your employer will usually have a discussion to discuss what it would take for you to earn extra money. If you follow through with what has been laid out, then… cha-ching! With all the hard work that went into you getting this extra chunk of change, it would be a shame if you just blew it on things that do not matter (or a stack of lottery tickets hoping to make more money).
The following are eight smart things you can (and should!) do with your bonus.


1. Start (or contribute more to) a financial freedom fund.

It is a good practice to have at least six to eight months worth of expenses in a high yield savings account as an emergency fund or, as I like to call it, a financial freedom fund. Use your bonus as an opportunity to either start your own financial freedom fund or put more into it. Having this money in an account will help you weather any financial storm and/or give you the strength to walk away from a toxic working environment.

2. Put more money into your 401(k).

A 401(k) is a great way to save for retirement. Even more so, if your employer provides a matching program, it gives you even more of a reason to start participating. Your bonus can give you the cash flow you need in order to increase your 401(k) contributions. While tax laws may not allow you to deposit your bonus into your 401(k) directly, having access to the extra cash will allow you to increase what you normally contribute from your check without the fear of not having enough money to meet your budget.


3. Fund a college savings account for your kid(s).

If you have kids and haven’t started a college savings account for them already, this is a great way to get a head start in the college planning process. Start a 529 savings plan for your kid(s) and allow the money to grow tax-free for their education.

4. Put money aside for a big purchase.

Many of us would love to buy a new car, fancy furniture, trendy electronics, or upgrade our wardrobe, but may not have had the funds to do so. If your bonus is big enough, this may be the time to set aside money to make a big purchase. While I don’t suggest that you use all of your bonus, this can give you a head start on achieving your dreams.


5. Start investing in the markets.

Many people do not invest their money outside of a retirement savings plans. But now may be the time you take a shot at it. Investing money outside of your retirement account can give you some good returns in the long run and diversify assets to mitigate risk. Instead of putting all of your eggs in one basket, spread them out to increase your chance of reaching true financial freedom.

6. Invest in yourself.

Author Robin S. Sharma said, “Investing in yourself is the best investment you will ever make. It will not only improve your life, it will improve the lives of all those around you.” Take this opportunity to invest in a certificate program, buy some books, hire a coach, or take an exciting online course (like the ones they offer on Udemy.com). Invest in yourself and allow your value to go up in the long term.


7. Give to charity.

Not only is giving to a good cause a noble thing to do, it can also help increase your blessings. There is a universal law that says, “The more you, give the more you get.” Use this blessing to be a blessing to others.

8. Have some fun!


If you have been following your budget strictly and have been diligent with prioritizing finances, then this might be a good time to let your hair loose. Have some fun—use some of your bonus to simply enjoy yourself! Buy an expensive dinner, purchase a piece of jewelry you’ve always wanted, or go on a two-week excursion that’s on your bucket list. You only live once, so if you’ve been doing so responsibly, then it’s about time to enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Monday 2 April 2018

How to choose the best fund manager ?


Choosing a managed fund involves plenty of contradictions. On one hand, each fund boasts how well it’s done in the last year … or three years … or five years. But underneath the glossy advert the regulator has forced it to write: “past returns are not a predictor of future performance”. Which should you believe?

Ask for advice and you’ll regularly be told that managed funds are for idiots anyway. Overall, the average fund underperforms the market once fees and expenses are taken into account. For this reason, supporters of passive investing insist you should forget the whole idea of managed funds and just buy the cheapest tracker fund you can. No manager is a better choice than any manager, they say.

So it’s understandable that a lot of baffled investors make one of two simple decisions. Either they take the advice of just buying trackers, because the tracker argument makes sense. Or they plump for a managed fund from a big, well-known fund manager, because it should be reliable.


Understandable – but wrong. You can do better than either of these options. But successful investing requires work and the same applies to picking funds.

You need to get to grips with how the fund management business works, understand why the vast majority of funds are a bad investment and then put in a bit of time to pick a few that aren’t. This article will explain how to do that.


The four flaws of fund management

The crucial mistake that many investors make comes from not grasping four simple facts about funds and fund management:

First, the goal of an average fund management company is not to make you wealthier. It’s to make itself wealthier, through gathering as much money as it can from investors and charging as high a set of fees as it can for looking after those assets. A fund company’s true business model is to be an asset gatherer, not an asset manager.


Second, this means that the average fund manager is not incentivised to manage your money in the way that’s best for you. Instead, he or she is incentivised to draw in as much money as possible from new investors, while losing as little as possible to existing investors taking it out. That is what his bosses want and doing what his bosses want is the best way to secure his career.
Third, it is not possible to beat the market consistently over short periods. A good investor will outperform over five years, but quarterly performance is essentially random. Unfortunately, the industry is becoming increasingly short-termist. If a manager underperforms significantly for a couple of quarters, they will come under pressure from their bosses, because weak performance could lead to impatient investors pulling out their money.


Fourth, the simplest way for a manager to avoid this risk of a rapid end to their career is to avoid underperforming the market too much. However, to have any chance of outperforming the market, you need to take out-of-consensus decisions that could lead to you underpeforming the market, at least temporarily. So the manager’s best bet is stick quite closely to the overall market, avoiding the risk of underperforming too much, but giving up the chance of outperforming.

It may sound cynical, but this is how fund management works. If you talk to managers who have been around the industry for a while and they are sufficiently candid – usually when they’ve retired, they’re drunk or they just don’t care anymore – they will agree that fund management looks after its own interests and often does a terrible job for investors in the funds.

Why most managed funds underperform

What’s the outcome of this? Most funds from most fund management companies are trackers in all but name. The manager sticks relatively closely to the benchmark and what his peers are doing and avoids taking big bets. They may outperform by a couple of percent one year or underperform by a couple of percent the next year, but they will never take the kinds of investment decisions that mean they are likely to outperform significantly over the long term.
Managers disguise this. They talk up the merits of certain stocks or sectors – but very rarely will they overweight these to the extent that might make a real difference to performance. And regardless of how bad a major sector is, rarely will they leave it out of the fund entirely.
Meanwhile, they follow dubious practices such “window dressing”. This means buying shares that have done well towards the end of each quarter so that they can say to their bosses and investors that they own these successful stocks. Never mind they’ve owned them for all of three days and missed out on all the gains.

So in most cases, advocates of passive investing are correct. The average fund charges much higher fees – and trades more actively, creating higher costs – to end up more-or-less following the market. Over time, you will do better with a low-cost tracker than a typical fund that follows the same benchmark, since because costs will be lower.

Ten tips for choosing better funds

So if you want to do no more work, stick to buying low-cost tracker funds, such as exchange traded funds (ETFs). You will probably do better than you would through a typically managed fund.
That said, there are opportunities for investors to beat the market over the long run. The further you go into areas such as small cap stocks and emerging markets, the greater these opportunities are. But they exist even among the biggest, most liquid stocks.

However, finding a manager who worth the higher fees that come with managed fund takes work. You need to analyse funds, work out if each is really an asset manager or simply an asset gatherer and discard the vast majority to indentify the few that are worth investing in.


There are no simple shortcuts. But the following tips should give you an idea of what to look for:

1. Ignore most of the big names. The large fund houses tend to be the worst when it comes to the asset gathering mindset and their funds are usually determindly mediocre. And superstar fund managers may well just have got there by being a bit lucky and very media-friendly.
Instead, it’s the boutiques that manage just a couple of funds or the specialists that focus on a single area that are more likely to have the right investing mindset. This doesn’t mean that all of them are good – most still aren’t. But you’re more likely to find a good manager in a small outfit than a large one.

2. Go small. This is often related to the first point, since boutiques are likely to have smaller funds. But why is this useful by itself? Because a smaller fund has more flexibility to take decisions that can make a big difference to performance.


A large fund often can’t put 5% of its assets into a small cap stock, however good the prospect is, because there isn’t enough liquidity in the stock. A smaller fund sometimes can. So it can make bigger, more concentrated bets on what the manager thinks are the best prospects.

3. Look at past performance – but carefully. Past performance certainly isn’t a predictor of the future, but it tells you something about what the manager does. If his returns are consistently very like the index, that suggests he’s running a tracker in all but name.

You shouldn’t necessarily write off funds that have underperformed. You need to work out why. Did the manager underperform because he focused mostly on staid stocks while racy ones were outperforming? That tells you something about his investment style and the kind of conditions in which he might outperform the market.


4. Look at the portfolio and compare it to his benchmark. Does he hold mostly the same shares in the same weights as the index? Are his sector weightings very much like the index? If so, that supports the idea he’s running a quasi-tracker.

On the other hand, if the two are quite different, it can be much more encouraging. Assume only three of the ten largest stocks in the index are in his top ten holdings. And his biggest sector is consumer staples at 20%, versus 5% in the benchmark, while he has just 5% in financials, which are 30% of the benchmark. That points to a manager who isn’t afraid to buy whatever he thinks is best.


5. Look at the size of the portfolio. How many shares are there? We want a manager who takes concentrated high-conviction positions in his preferred stocks, not one who half-heartedly owns lots of companies. That’s the only way to outperform.

Around 40 is typically a good number (even lower is fine for a very small fund). That’s diversified while being few enough that some stellar performers can make a difference. Given a couple of research assistants, a manager can keep on top of that many firms. But 60 is starting to look a bit high and 100 is far too much – at that point, it might as well be a tracker.

6. Look at portfolio turnover – the percentage of the portfolio bought and sold every year. This can be a bit harder to judge, because there are some strategies that revolve around relatively short holding periods. But for most funds, you want it to be low – say around 20%.
Why? First, it means that manager is making a high-conviction decision and giving it time to pan out, not jumping in and out on a whim. Second, turnover affects trading costs: lower turnover means lower costs and thus less drag on performance.

7. Try to understand what kind of companies the manager buys and why he does. After all, you’re looking for a manager who will invest your money with a similar level of risk to the risk you’d take if you were doing it yourself.

So if you’re a conservative investor, you’re probably looking for signs that the manager invests in high quality firms. If he doesn’t invest in certain high profile firms or entire sectors because he thinks there are severe corporate governance issues or other problems, that may be an encouraging sign. Obviously, if you’re less conservative, you may be willing to accept more speculative investments.

That said, every investor – regardless of risk tolerance – should be aware that managing other people’s money is very different to managing your own. Many managers are willing to hold something in their fund that they wouldn’t trust with their own money. Regardless of your investing outlook, you’re still looking for evidence of prudence and quality control in a manager’s decisions.


8. Read what the manager says in his investor reports and in media interviews. Look back at past comments. Then compare what he said to reality: how the fund performed and what it is invested in.

Are the two the same? Try to establish if the manager is candid, with a coherent and consistent investment style. Avoid those that seem to change their minds often, talk up the merits of the 
latest hot topic constantly and buy any old junk, never to mention it again when it goes wrong.
9. Be realistic about what you expect from a fund. It’s impossible to know what will perform best in the short term and performance can be volatile. That affects both good and bad managers.


If you’re investing in the stock market, your time frame should be quite long – a matter of many years, not a few months. So your focus should be on whether a manager seems likely to outperform in the long run, not whether he’ll do okay in the next quarter. In fact, the more investors fixate on short-term performance, the harder it is for managers to make good long-term decisions.

10. Don’t ignore fees. While this article is mostly about choosing a manager for better performance, never forget that the fees you pay also have a big impact on long-term investment returns (one percentage point more in annual fees can make a 10% difference over a decade). A good manager can be worth the higher fees relative to a tracker fund, but you should still try to keep these down.

Where possible, look at buying funds through fund supermarkets and discount brokers to get reduced fees. Remember that the extra savings you make this way were usually not going to the fund manager in the first place, but to a middleman – and they’re certainly not doing anything to help your fund perform better.

Do your research or stick with trackers

If you follow this approach, it will probably lead you away from many of the hot investment ideas and funds you see touted everywhere. It will probably lead you to conclude that 90% of managed funds are worthless and many of the ones you want to put your money are relatively small, obscure and unfashionable ones that few of your fellow investors know.

In short, it’s rather like investing directly in stocks. It doesn’t require quite so much ongoing analysis and monitoring, but the initial selection of a fund needs detailed research, just like investing in stocks.


If you don’t want to go through this process, then you should consider sticking with trackers. You won’t outperform the market – but after costs, you’ll outperform the typical managed fund.
If you’re prepared to put in the time to pick good managers, you have a realistic chance of better than this. But if you don’t – and you just go with the first funds you see advertised or talked about – the odds are that you will simply pay extra for worse performance.

How to pick the best fund manager ?

Choosing a fund manager is a notoriously difficult task, but it has never been more important to pick the right one - with stockmarkets so volatile, someone who can be relied upon to deliver top-drawer returns is worth their weight in gold.

Fund managers hold your future prosperity in their hands and whether your money doubles in value or vanishes overnight will largely rest on their judgements. Being in the wrong companies or sectors at the wrong time can prove disastrous, while opting for areas that soar in value can dramatically increase the value of your portfolio.

The global economic downturn has only served to emphasise this. Although the vast majority of investment funds have lost money over the past year, there has been a huge gulf between the best and worst performers.


According to the Investment Management Association (IMA), the sector with the best average percentage growth in the year to the end of April 2008 was IMA Global Bonds, with 12.5% growth. Other relatively high-performing areas of the market, including IMA UK Gilt and IMA Money Market, also made modest profits as the severe recession started to take a grip and fear resonated throughout international stockmarkets.

Investors with money in these sectors were the lucky ones, however. Anyone with money in the IMA UK Smaller Companies sector will have been staring down the barrel of a 35.5% average loss, while IMA Property has slumped 33.6%.



Even more worrying is the fact that this divide can also be seen within individual IMA sectors, even though all of the funds have to conform to the same broad guidelines for portfolio construction.

Take the competitive UK All Companies, for example. The star turn during the past 12 months has been the Ryan Hughes and James Millard duo. Skandia’s UK Strategic Best Ideas fund has only lost 9.7% up to 9 February, according to mid-to-mid figures compiled by Morningstar.
At the other end of the spectrum is Jamie Allsopp’s New Star Hidden Value. This has shed a staggering 55.4% over the same period and, not unexpectedly, sits forlornly at the bottom of a 314-strong list of funds.



So where should you begin when picking a fund manager?


With so many funds available to retail investors, there’s hardly a shortage of managers to choose from, so you’ll need to cut this vast investment universe down to a more manageable size.

In fact, Mark Dampier, head of research at Hargreaves Lansdown, says: “There are only a limited number of very talented fund managers around. But your chances of finding one can improve significantly if you take the time to lift the bonnet and find out what a fund aims to achieve.”



Set your goals


The first task is to set your own investment goals and horizons, says Darius McDermott, managing director of Chelsea Financial Services. Until you know what you’re trying to achieve, it’s pointless searching for someone to fit the bill.

“You need to establish your attitude to risk and decide for how long you will be happy to tie up your money,” he says. “Equity investing should only be for those with longer-term horizons of at least five years, and preferably longer.”


Questions to ask yourself include: do you want exposure to a particular sector, such as pharmaceuticals, or do you want to invest in the best European stocks; and are you happy playing it relatively safe in a fund mirroring the UK index or do you want to embrace emerging markets?

Ignore fashion and trends, advises Andrew Merricks, head of research at Skerritt Consultants; as funds may enjoy short-term periods of stunning performance but these happy times can easily come to an abrupt halt. Instead, you should opt for managers and funds with sound, longer-term investment goals that offer an acceptable level of risk.

“I always annoy JPMorgan by saying Ian Henderson, the manager of its Natural Resources fund, has been the luckiest manager of the decade,” Merricks says. “He was in the right sector at the right time when things were going up, because he’s a momentum manager. But soon as natural resources fell, his fund went down as well.”



A good track record


You should always research the manager rather than the fund, adds Dampier. Fund managers switch jobs at such a rapid rate that this can reflect unfairly on a portfolio’s quoted performance figures.

The best way to do this is to examine the manager’s track record. Have they been producing the goods in different cycles or only in rising markets? How long have they stayed in their jobs? Do they enjoy the benefit of a stable team around them?

“There’s certainly no point looking at a fund’s 10-year track record if it has been managed by half a dozen different people over that period,” Dampier explains. “The current managers may be eroding all the good work done by their predecessors.”


Scrutinise their performance and, if it’s bad, try to work out what has happened. For example, are the figures based on unusual market circumstances, such as the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000? Or have there been underlying problems in the sector?

Although you can’t have one-to-one chats with fund managers, you can carry out research using websites such as trustnet.co.uk, morningstar.co.uk and iii.co.uk.

Investors often use past performance as a guide, but this could be very misleading, argues Nick Pothier, manager of the HSBC Open Global Return fund.

“There are very few rules in fund manager selection because there are so many variables,” he says. “You need to stack the probabilities in your favour as much as possible, and that’s a subjective process.”

You should take a number of different factors into account, 
such as the structure of the investment house; the philosophy and style of the manager; the way they are rewarded; and the quality of the research support that backs them up.

“The short-term performance of a manager in isolation is virtually irrelevant, because you don’t know what led to that performance,” Pothier says. “You need to consider all the different variables at work.”



Age versus youth


You also need to consider whether to opt for a manager who’s been in the same job for decades or one who’s fresh in the post. This is a particularly important decision, given the number of young managers who are marketed as future stars.

The main benefits of picking a manager who has run the same fund for many years is that they will have plenty of stockpicking experience, knowledge of different economic environments, an established investment philosophy and a good team behind them.

But Andy Gadd, head of research at Lighthouse Group, warns that you shouldn’t automatically dismiss the young bucks for being inexperienced; they may have spent many years training as analysts before being handed the reins of a fund.

“You’ll often find that new managers have followed an established career path that has given them a very good grounding,” he says. 
“In many cases, they will have started out in a research department and served 
their time as apprentice managers.”



How long to hang on?


Unfortunately, even thorough research won’t guarantee that your manager will always make you money. So when should you think about replacing them? Do you allow them a few months’ underperformance, or a couple of years?

“Short-term underperformance can be a red flag showing that something needs investigating. But it shouldn’t be the driver of your decision,” says Pothier. “We’ve held managers who have underperformed quite dramatically; we’ve stuck with them and they’ve come back strongly.”
Managers may underperform because their particular investment style or region of focus is currently out of favour. To see if that’s the case, look at how their sector rivals have performed – you may find they’ve lost less money than others running similar portfolios.


A prime example is Invesco Perpetual’s Neil Woodford who runs both the Invesco Perpetual Income and Invesco Perpetual High Income funds. He was one of the few managers who shunned the ill-fated dotcom boom in the late 1990s, but his stance was eventually proven to be correct, says Dampier. “Woodford didn’t join the technology boom at all, despite being under immense pressure to do so. I can remember him banging his fist on the table, saying it was all going to end in tears.”

It’s a similar situation when a manager quits a fund. While it can be tempting to sell immediately, you may find the investment house replaces them with someone of an equal or higher stature.


At other times, there may be a more dramatic outcome. For example, a few years ago, Neil Pegrum announced he was moving to Cazenove from Insight Investment, less than 18 months after joining the company to launch its UK Dynamic fund. The news came as such a devastating blow that Insight decided to close the fund.

More recently, independent consultants Old Broad Street Research removed New Star UK Alpha fund’s AA rating following the announcement that its manager, Tim Steer, is leaving to join Artemis once the merger between Henderson and New Star has been completed.
It all depends on how a manager is operating, says Geoff Penrice, a financial adviser at Bates Investment Services. “The factors I look for include someone taking too much risk to try and boost returns, or not reacting quickly enough to changes.”



Call in the specialist


At the end of the day, according to John Chatfeild-Roberts, author of 'Fundology: The Secrets of Successful Fund Investing', it comes down to assessing the qualities displayed by fund managers and monitoring their performance.

“The best fund managers will always question what’s going on around them and think about companies from a number of different points of view,” he says. “Spotting what others haven’t noticed gives them an edge and enables them to make money.”

So, selecting a fund and a fund manager is not an easy task. Gadd says: “This is a very complex business, one that’s perhaps best left to a specialist like a fund-of-fund manager who invests in a variety of portfolios. With the input of an adviser, they’ll have a good understanding of your aims, and the knowledge and expertise to manage your money properly.”



Five things to find out about a fund manager before investing


1. What constraints are set by the investment house?
2. How is the manager’s performance judged?
3. What personal investment guidelines are in place for managers?
4. How many other responsibilities do they have within the company?
5. How are they remunerated?

Warning signs that it might be time to ditch your fund manager
• Three consecutive years of underperformance
• Dramatic changes to the style of investing
• A manager leaving the fund