The
Wall Street Journal has some bad news for
Pimco [see profile] and
Loomis Sayles [see profile]. Last week Min Zeng
reported that the $13.4-billion
Vanguard Intermediate-Term Bond Index Fund (VBIIX) [see profile] is beating all 177 other intermediate bond funds tracked by
Lipper. The index fund's 9.77 percent year-to-date performance leaves
Bill Gross' $244.3-billion
Pimco Total Return Fund (PTTRX, with 2.91 percent) and
Dan Fuss' $19.8-billion
Loomis Sayles Bond Fund (LSBDX, with 3.79 percent) in the dust.
Yet, the WSJ notes that both the Loomis and Pimco funds benchmark against a different index: the
Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. That index returned 6.95 percent year-to-date, also beating both star PMs, while the Vanguard fund tracks the
Barclays Capital U.S. 5-10 Year Government/Credit Float Adjusted Index.
And over the long run, Fuss and Gross still beat out the Vanguard fund: over the past 15 years, the Loomis Sayles fund returned 8.5 percent, the Pimco fund returned 7.15 percent and the Vanguard fund returned 6.85 percent.
A low expense ratio of 22 basis points, versus 46 bps for Pimco Total Return and 64 bps for Loomis Sayles Bond, helped the index fund beat the field this year. Asset allocation also helped. Vanguard Intermediate-Term Bond Index allocates 52 percent of its assets to Treasuries currently, compared to 19 percent for Pimco Total Return. Treasuries have returned 8.87 percent year-to-date.
Joshua Barrickman, who PMs Vanguard Intermediate-Term Bond Index, also credited the fund's success to its longer average duration, 6.2 years, compared to 4.4 for the Pimco fund and 5.67 for the Loomis Sayles one.
Morningstar research vice president
John Rekenthaler and Lipper senior research analyst
Jeff Tjornehoj both weighed in for the article. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE