Journalists continue to take shots at active management. The
Wall Street Journal's Ben Levisohn and Joe Light
report on new analysis that found five of seven high-profile, actively-managed funds neither over- or under-performing over the past decade when beta, size and style are taken into account. Yet the analysis, conducted for the WSJ by
IndexUniverse, found that those three factors failed to explain the performance of two
Fidelity [
profile] stars,
Contrafund and
Magellan.
The article does not mention whether Contra and Magellan out- or under-performed according to the analysis.
Dodge & Cox Stock [
profile],
Vanguard Windsor [
profile], and
American Funds' [
profile]
Investment Company of America,
Fundamental Investors and
Growth Fund of America all failed to over- or under-perform in IndexUniverse's analysis.
A
Capital Group spokesman claimed that
their funds have consistently outperformed their benchmark indexes. And Vanguard principal
Dan Newhall said that the backward-looking analysis did not
consider how Windsor might change its factor exposures, and he added that
Windsor's expense ratio of 30 basis points is relatively cheap.
The article also mentions Texas-based financial planner
Lance Alston, who recommends index funds over
actively managed funds. And
William Bernstein of
Efficient Frontier Advisors also weighed in. 
Edited by:
HFD
Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE