Gitlin stresses the importance of staying the course. The hazards of market timing. Some poignant comments about the adverse effects going public can have on an investment company. Not fond of
DIY investors. What caught my attention was that he replaced highly capable fixed income head Mary Miller at T Rowe Price in 2009 after Miller left the firm for a position in Washington. I’ve long wondered why Price’s fixed income division came up lacking after Miller departed. Now I know. Says Gitlin, “I wasn’t qualified for that position.”
Comments
staying private , finbro-mance , performance
As someone who has had a very large holding in Capital Group funds for nearly 20 years, I've been very pleased with them.
I have had some lowest ER R6 classes in 403b.
I don't like any of their underlying equity products but they are great allocators in their allocation products, have really listened when it comes to expense ratios, and i think their fund management strategy is good. Again, I just think the flagship equity funds are too big at this point for me to move money to.
I manage my parents portfolio of american funds and have been consolidating down to a single allocation fund to make things simpler for them.
I knew one of their "top investment partners " or whatever they called their independent broker salesmen.
He was a nice enough guy but I didn't see why my investment dollars had to pay for the frequent all expense paid luxury trips he was always going on to American Fund events.
The trips were awarded to the highest "producers". Bit of a conflict on interest don't you think?
I’ve never invested in Capital Group funds until they entered the ETF market. I currently hold double-digits in CGUS and CGDV. I’ve been pleased with their performance so far, although they have a little more overlap (per etfrc.com).
I like to invest in active funds to compliment the passive funds I own. FYI : I only hold a handful of funds.
There seems to be enough uniqueness because they often zig/zag somewhat.
Any comments or thoughts are greatly appreciated! Thx. Matt
CGDV performing similar to the American Fund that my 403(b) is in, fwiw saying --- no worries!
About 15-20 years ago I followed a fella off a plane at Key West airport. Dressed to kill & carrying a briefcase labeled “T. Rowe Price” with a blinking red or green light on it. Looked like it was getting ready to blow. And the attire was definitely out of sync with the atmosphere & climate there …
A bit over five years ago. He was a one man investment firm. I am sure he charged the usual 1.25% of assets or so and may have still used mutual funds with sig fees
for me they are different enough to pay attention to but I also feel like eventually they'll become more aligned with their indexes than they should.
CGGR is the only one i've tracked and as of now it is underperforming its index but 2 months ago it was beating it and 2 years is really not much of a record to make a decision on.
I think the real value for these are people who invest outside of retirement accounts. regardless of performance the tax implications of AF funds are pretty big. the ETF wrapper allows you to stay in AF but not have the huge tax hits year in and year out.
Did I get this wrong?
Thx again, Matt
No one has commented on CGUS. I own it and VOO and was using CGUS as a “complimentary” actively managed fund. Am I misguided? Are they too similar? Am I overthinking and unnecessarily complicating my portfolio?
Any thoughts anyone? Thx!!!
I like CGDV because it is / has been a LCB fund with a value tilt (equity income). I’m not convinced that true / pure Value is the future, could be wrong but time will tell.
I’m a TR and a non-trading investor although I do look to improve my portfolio when the opportunity arises and I believe some of the Capital Group ETF family gave me that opportunity.
Do you or any others have any further thoughts, opinions or suggestions regarding my choices and/or logic? Thx!
Is it worth stepping up some risk to enjoy the better returns of CGCP or is it too early to tell? Thanks!