Morningstar's just landed some extra national exposure for its new, forward-looking, mutual fund rating system. On Saturday the
New York Times' Robert Hershey
highlighted Morningstar's new analyst ratings, comparing it to different systems from
Standard & Poor's and
Lipper.
The article offers an overview of all three systems.
The
NYTimes emphasized the predictive nature of S&P's system and of Morningstar's analyst ratings, when compared with performance-centric systems like Morningstar's star ratings.
The S&P system draws on S&P's recommendations regarding the individual investments inside of a given mutual fund, recommendations based on S&P's expectations for an investment's returns over the next twelve months.
Meanwhile, the Morningstar analyst ratings come from five pillars, including backward-looking performance, as well as more forward-looking areas like people, process, parent and price.
Vanguard founder
Jack Bogle, Morningstar fund analysis director
Karen Dolan, and S&P's lead mutual fund ratings developer,
Todd Rosenbluth, all weighed in for the article. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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