Long ago I developed a curiosity about whether focused / non-diversified / concentrated portfolios offered some distinctive advantage. The purest test I could imagine was finding paired sets of funds run by the same manager using the same strategy, one of which was a focused fund. Found five, one of which (ICAP / ICAP Select) is now dead.
Purely in total return, not risk-adjusted return, terms:
Ariel / Ariel Focus - Focus wins the 3-year race, loses the 5-year
Marsico / Marsico Focus - Focus wins 3-year and 5-year
Oakmark / Oakmark Select - Select loses 3-year and 5-year
Yacktman / Yacktman Focused - virtual tie for 3-year and 5-year, with Focus trailing by 15 bps
My interim conclusion: concentration is not a reliable tool for adding alpha. Am I missing fund pairs or an insight?
Comments
Same as when you compare TR for XLG, VOO, and VONE 10-5-3-1y. Diworsification and all that.
Probably too new to provide meaningful performance insight are the three Vanguard Advice Select funds.
Vanguard 2021 launch announcement
In particular, Vanguard Advice Select Dividend Growth (VADGX) is described as "A more concentrated version of the strategy used in Vanguard Dividend Growth Fund."
VADGX / VDIGX - Select wins over lifetime (since 11/9/2021)
Another of the funds, Vanguard Advice Select International Growth (VAIGX) is described as using "as a more concentrated version of the strategy used in Vanguard International Growth Fund" (VWIGX). However, since management of the latter is split between Baillie Gifford and Schroeder, this isn't a good pairing for comparison.
But a comparison with Baillie Gifford International Growth (BGESX) may be apt, especially since the two BG managers of VWIGX are the two longest managers at BGESX. Though BGESX is concentrated (56 equity holdings, per M*), VAIGX is doubly focused, holding only 28 equity securities.
VAIGX / BGESX - Select wins over lifetime (since 11/9/2021), losing "only" 10.03%/year vs. an annualized 11.49% loss for the BG fund. Though the latter held the lead until February of this year.
IMHO what this really shows for Vanguard conspiracy theorists (I count myself among them) is that Vanguard is pushing investors either out or into managed accounts. These select funds are available only in managed accounts.
Amazing to me, but using PerfCharts, it shows starting at LCR's inception, Jan 2020, to today, a bit over 4 1/2 years, LCR and LCORX both have the exact accumulated return, 39.6%. The trend lines don't lay exactly on top of each other, but close, and they end up with the same return.
I don't know what to make of this other than management's preferred stock picks (LCORX) don't return any more or any less than a comparative index (LCR). The gain or loss is in the management process.
I would add that if you are a bottom up only investor / fund, focus can hurt biggly. High conviction with no flexibility can be dangerous. Having an eye on macro / momentum, in addition to focused, bottom up approach, allows one to navigate better. Some of you know examples of funds that practice focused approach with multi year losses.
performance-wise, XLG < OEF < IVV.
I didn't expect that despite their ERs of 20 bps, 20bps, 3 bps, respectively.
TestFol XLG OEF IVV MAX
Edit/Add. Performance for other timeframes,
3 Years IVV < OEF < XLG
5 Years IVV < OEF < XLG
10 Years IVV < XLG < OEF
??
Not when I graph TR $10k growth at Fidelity; rather, what you'd expect:
XLG $39,782; OEF $36,332; IVV $33,403
It looks that TestFol has some error in the data for XLG and its numbers for XLG are consistently lower (compared with PV).
New picture with PV:
3 Years IVV < OEF < XLG
5 Years IVV < OEF < XLG
10 Years IVV < OEF < XLG
That is what I was expecting because SP500 has become increasingly concentrated in mega-stocks. But at the time of my previous post, I didn't suspect errors in TestFol, so simply noted that the results were unexpected.
Edit/Add, 7/11/24. I contacted TestFol on this issue. It acknowledged the problem for XLG and fixed it promptly. Interestingly, my old linked runs now show the updated data for XLG (and they are now close to those from PV), but those for OEF and IVV are unchanged (i.e. I didn't have re-run those TestFol).
Many have now started using TestFol because after the recent update, FREE Portfolio Visualizer (PV) is quite limited or unfriendly. As this is sort of off topic for the OP, I won't post more here, but interested posters can find details at,
https://ybbpersonalfinance.proboards.com/post/1550/thread
Hennessy Japan Fund = HJPNX attempts to identify best Large Cap Japanese companies.
HJPNX - 27 Holdings
(rather than post mistaken conclusions)
“I have no aversion per se to concentrated funds (fewer than approximately 30 stocks). I’ve seen it work fine, but I’ve also seen it not work. For some reason, OAKMX has historically beaten OAKLX, which is worrisome: if a manager’s “best ideas” underperform ALL his ideas, then something’s got to be wrong… hmm?”
Since I started in 1995, there have been three long term cycles
1995-2000 + 2010-2020 = US Large cap tilting growth
2000-2010 = US Value, some small cap and some international
BTW, I changed the number of funds from 5 (2000-2018) to only 2-3 since retirement in 2018 because I can only find very limited great ideas.
You can read how I did it (here).
Concentrated Investing: Strategies of the World's Greatest Concentrated Value Investors
"... the surviving focus/select funds that exist today or have long track records are standing on the corpses of many that have gone extinct..."
ouch.
"Standing on the shoulders of giants" is a metaphor I've embraced for years.
But corpses?
Never heard that before.
But maybe I should have.
Anyway, seems to me a concentrated, or focused, fund is something heavily weighted to one, maybe two, ideas. And you can have that problem no matter how many stocks are in the portfolio.
Given the number of examples in the OP, we could be dealing with random chance.
The SP500 or VTI beat most manage stock funds and definitely individuals over long term.
Malakiel, Bogle, and Buffett all agree.
Add to it the fact that these fund managers are trained professionals who work 40 hours weekly.
So why buy individual stocks?
I can see an exception such as, take 10% of your portfolio and buy 5 stocks and let them run for decades.
I have a good friend who invest $3000 in several stocks in early 90s, all trailed the SP500, except MSFT who made him 1.5 million.
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Many still miss a point. VOO,VTI can also be one of the 3-5 funds you select.
I never believed in holding your funds for decades because leading categories change, market change, and good managers can start lagging, the reasons don't matter, they just lag.
Finally, the execution matters, when to switch or not.