Barron\'s - April 6 2020

(Joyce) #1

L4 BARRON’S•Funds Quarterly April 6, 2020


F


rom his office in Minot, N.D., Mike Morey isn’t seeing


much of the coronavirus pandemic firsthand. But as chief


investment officer of Viking Fund Management, a boutique


fund shop, he’s feeling the financial contagion. Investors


have withdrawn $9 million from the $620 million firm in


the past month, including $3 million from Integrity Divi-


dend Harvest , a conservative, dividend-oriented fund.


“The fear and stress are contagious,” says Morey, 33, who


pulls out a can of Lysol and wipes down door handles


when he gets into work, spending his days holed up


in his office. “We’re just trying to stay positive


and have faith that this will pass.”


Time to


Go Active?


Depends


On Where.


Active managers were supposed to shine as soon as the global

markets stopped marching higher in lock step. They didn’t. But there is

some room for active management—here’s how, and where, to look.

By DAREN FONDA


Illustration byMichal Bednarski


April 6, 2020 BARRON’S•Funds Quarterly L5

Funds for a Choppy Market


Focusing on quality, dividends, and domestic demand in China has helped these funds outperform.


AUM YTD
Fund / Ticker (mil) Return Comment

AB Large Cap Growth/ APGAX $9,600 -13.8%

Emphasizing large-cap growth stocks, this fund could
outperform if investors continue to seek safety in quality

Parnassus Core Equity/ PRBLX 15,200 -18.1

Owns stocks with high sustainability ratings, high profitability,
and wide economic moats

Integrity Dividend Harvest/ IDIVX 135 -20.0

A large-cap value fund that owns dividend-paying stocks
in mature industries like utilities, consumer staples, and

health care

Matthews China Small Companies/ MCMSX 167 11.9

China-focused fund that looks for stocks benefiting from

domestic demand, including health care, cybersecurity,
and food companies

Source: Morningstar

The pandemic will pass: China and


other countries are getting back to


work after showing that it can be con-


tained, and it will eventually level off


globally. As it winds down, investors


may be left wondering: Did it pay to


stick with active managers through


the crisis?


If ever there were a prime time for


active funds, this is it: the first bear


market since the financial crisis, soar-


ing volatility, and a chance for stock


and bond pickers to prove they can


tiptoe through the minefields, adding


value over unmanaged index funds


that mirror the market.


So far, the early results paint a


mixed picture. U.S. equity managers


are trailing their benchmarks by an


average 1.26 percentage points since


the end of February, according to a


sampling for 240 funds by Bernstein


Research. Across all domestic equity


categories, 48% of funds outper-


formed from February 15 to March 31,


according to Morningstar. Small-


growth managers had the highest suc-


cess rate with 63% outperforming,


while small-blend managers fared


worst with 32% beating their bench-


mark. Most bond managers haven’t


kept up either. Just 21% of taxable


bond funds are edging their bench-


mark—a casualty of a steep plunge in


corporate debt. International stock


managers had a 30% success rate, and


42% of municipal bond funds outper-


formed, according to an early tally of


results. (See “What To Do With Your


Bond Portfolio Now” on page L8.)


“Proponents of active management


said the next bear market would be a


vindicating event,” says Jeffrey Ptak,


head of global manager research at


Morningstar. “But if someone was


waiting for active managers to roar


back, ithasn’t happened so far.”


Active Managers Need More Time


A few weeks of data aren’t enough to


pass judgement, of course. The mar-


kets are so volatile that a few big


swings can push managers into the


outperforming camp in a matter of


days. There’s still plenty of runway for


managers to outperform, and some


are holding up reasonably well, in-


cluding a few solid funds that Barron’s


found (more on that later).


Indeed, market conditions are ripe


for active managers. A key advantage


now is a wider dispersion between


stock returns—the spread between


winners and losers. Dispersion is now


at 2008 levels, according to S&P Dow


Jones Indices. Higher dispersion cre-


ates more opportunity for stock pick-


ers to outperform; if dispersion is only


2%, picking a few winners won’t add


much excess return; but if it soars to


20%, then a manager can be a hero for


picking the standouts. “If you’re a


good active manager, this is your mo-


ment,” says Craig Lazzara, global head


of index investment strategy at S&P


Dow Jones Indices. “A wide dispersion


doesn’t guarantee success, but if you


succeed it’ll be really impressive.”


Some studies support the idea that


high volatility and bear markets give


active managers an edge. A recent


study by StyleAnalytics, a fund-


industry consulting firm, found that


large-cap managers outperformed the


Russell 1000 index by an average of 27


basis points (0.27 percentage points) a


month during the most severe market


downturns since 1995. In falling mar-


kets, the top 25% of managers edged


the index 60% of the time while the


top 5% of managers beat the index 75%


of the time, the firm said in a report.


Yet investors shouldn’t read much


into these results. Even in years of


above-average dispersion, more than


half of active managers still trailed


their benchmarks, Lazzara says. Only


30% of domestic equity funds beat the


S&P Composite 1500 index in 2019,


the fourth worst performance for ac-


tive managers since 2001. High volatil-


ity and dispersion could improve re-


sults for active managers, but it’s still


unlikely to see more than 50% outper-


forming, partly because the market is a


zero-sum game (where one manager’s


gains are another one’s losses).


Part of the problem is that no two


bear markets are alike, so what


worked in the past may be less effec-


tive now. Active managers generally


did well during the bear market of


2000-02, for instance. Why? Because


the downturn was fueled by tech.


Value and small-cap managers who


steered clear of tech were able to out-


perform. And large-cap managers


who diluted their portfolios with non-


tech stocks did better than the tech-


heavy large-cap indexes.


Other bear markets have proved to


be more challenging. The global finan-


cial crisis wiped out larger swaths of


the market, reducing the excess re-


turns of even the top active managers,


according to StyleAnalytics. Outper-


formance dwindled even more in the


2011 and 2018 U.S. market corrections.


“I’m not convinced that large-cap


managers do so much better in down


markets to redeem themselves en


masse,” says Ptak. The general rule is


that indexes are harder to outshine


when the markets are rising and easier


to beat when they’re falling. But the


extent to which managers outperform


in bear markets usually doesn’t make


up for lost ground in rising markets.


Funds have a lot of catching up to


do. Two-thirds of the active funds that


outperformed in this bear market


trailed their index in the preceding


rally from December 2018 to February



  1. Their gains in the downturn


haven’t overcome the deficits they


racked up; consequently, funds that


are outperforming now are still lag-


ging behind their index since late De-


cember 2018, on average.


Funds With Downside Protection


If you go active, where might it pay


off? One tactic is to look for funds


with a low “downside capture” ratio.


A fund with a downside capture of


Still Missing


The Mark


Actively man-


aged funds were


supposed to do


better in a


market rout.


48%


of active funds


beat their bench-


marks in the first


six weeks of the


pandemic crisis.


A Mixed Bag


Active managers have not risen to the occasion in the way most investors would


have liked. Since the market peaked in mid February, only four categories had


more than half their funds beat their Russell benchmark through March 31.


Number of Funds Percentage of
Outperformed Total Funds Outperformers

Large Blend 193 352 54.8%

Large Growth 160 367 43.6

Large Value 175 309 56.6

Mid-Cap Blend 45 102 44.1

Mid-Cap Growth 74 171 43.3

Mid-Cap Value 60 106 56.6

Small Blend 60 189 31.8

Small Growth 114 181 63.0

Small Value 49 120 40.8

Source: Morningstar Direct Data for Feb. 15 through March 31.
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