Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password
  • Set your IBTimes.com Edition

Many top U.S. funds still making up lost ground



By Ross Kerber - Analysis
03 July 2009 @ 10:14 am ET

At the midyear mark, even some of the best-performing mutual funds of 2009 are still working on comebacks from dismal losses last year, underscoring lingering uncertainty in markets and in the funds industry.



A green polystyrene bull figure stands on top of a trading screen at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt in this June 17, 2009 file photo. (REUTERS / Kai Pfaffenbach)
1 of 1

Equity funds that invest in China and Latin America boast some of the biggest gains this year, according to fund-tracker Lipper Inc, a Thomson Reuters company, as well as some high-yield bond funds. Big losers include financial services sector funds and bond funds that invest in U.S. treasuries.

Yet many of top funds are only making up for losses suffered in the brutal bear market of 2008.

A top equity performer, Dreyfus Emerging Asia Fund, was up 84.3 percent through the end of June, swinging from a decline of 61.4 percent in 2008.

Also, the best mid-cap growth fund for the first half of 2009 was one from the RiverSource unit of Ameriprise Financial Inc, RiverSource Mid Cap Growth Fund, up 31.4 percent for the first half of the year -- compared with a decline of 44.7 percent last year.

Among large-cap growth funds, the best was Van Kampen's Equity Growth fund, up 34.4 percent through midyear -- after a decline of 50.7 percent last year.

"What we have here was a reaction like the pendulum swinging the other way," said Lipper research manager Jeff Tjornehoj. That doesn't mean that the gains will continue, he cautioned.

"The market built a little momentum and wham bam, you had a terrific year to date in 2009," he said. But he added, "it's not like this is how the rest of the year will go." A positive scenario would be for the market to hold on to its gains and not repeat last year's volatility.

The context for equities is that the Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 38.5 percent last year, its third-worst year ever, and equity funds lost even more, down 38.8 percent.

SIDEWAYS FOR THE SUMMER

Tjornehoj said he doesn't expect dramatic gains or losses for markets or for many funds for the next few months, and that only toward the end of the year will it become clear just how strong the recovery will become.

"I expect things to be sideways for the summer, and in the fourth quarter we may get more clarity on the direction of markets and the economy," he said.

Plenty of funds that lost money last year have continued the trend with their big holdings in sectors like real estate and banking still struggling.

The worst-performing equity fund in the first half of the year was ProFunds' Real Estate UltraSector ProFund, down 26.84 percent, after falling 65.35 percent in 2008.

Another, Invesco's PowerShares Dynamic Financials Sector Portfolio fund, was down 28.8 percent through June 30, after falling 12.7 percent last year.

Among U.S. equities, mid-cap growth funds did best, rising 13.6 percent for the year so far on enthusiasm for mid-sized companies' ability to contain costs and improve revenue.

The manager who topped the category, John Schonberg of RiverSource Mid Cap Growth Fund, credited the performance to his decision to buy and hold stocks he believed had value even as their prices were falling.

"I would say in the depths of despair last year, it was easier to pick good companies that were being sold indiscriminately," Schonberg said.

BOND FUNDS

Several of those with swift rebounds this year include Web hosting firm Akamai Technologies Inc and communications equipment maker PMC-Sierra Inc.

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

*Name

  • International Business Times Secutiry Check

advertisement
More Finance
Xerox Corp <XRX.N> plans to buy Affiliated Computer Services Inc <ACS.N> for $5.5 billion to move into the outsourcing business, but shares o...
Warner Music Group Corp and YouTube are finalizing an agreement that would allow music videos from artists such as Madonna and Green Day to once again be...
Investors in a class-action lawsuit against Bank of America Corp <BAC.N> over the Merrill Lynch & Co takeover are trying to collect "billions o...

advertisement
 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© Copyright 2010 Intertnational Business Times. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives