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Lipper Names CrossingBridge "Best Fixed Income Small Fund Family Group"

edited March 19 in Fund Discussions
Someone posted the following link on another forum.
Thought folks here might be interested.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/crossingbridge-advisors-named-best-fixed-161600709.html

Comments

  • edited March 19
    Here's a link to all 2025 U.S. Lipper Fund Awards.
    https://www.lipperfundawards.com/Awards/UnitedStates/2025/Fund
  • Kudos and a big thank you to Dr. Snowball who has reviewed and brought to our attention the Sherman run funds at Riverpark and Crossingbridge. I have been very satisfied with the multiple funds Sherman runs that I own and he deserves this award without question!
  • An interesting list with 3 5 10 year categories.

    I assume they just used raw performance. Some of their picks are a bit odd

    Kinetics Global is 3 and 5 year winner for Global Small/mid

    45% Bitcoin and Texas Pacific Land !
  • edited March 20
    "The highest Lipper Leader for Consistent Return (Effective Return) value within each eligible classification determines the fund classification winner over three, five, or 10 years."

    Methodology PDF
  • I read that but they do not explain how they calculate "Effective Return" The link goes back to the same document
  • edited March 20
    @sma3,

    The following information may be helpful.

    Lipper Ratings for Consistent Return

    Introduction
    The Consistent Return measure is a richer risk-adjusted
    performance measure than others currently available in the
    marketplace. It takes into account both short- and long-term
    risk-adjusted performance relative to fund classification.
    The measure is based on the Effective Return computation.
    Effective Return is a risk-adjusted return measure that looks
    back over a variety of holding periods (measured in days,
    weeks, months, and/or years).

    Calculation and Rating
    Lipper ratings for Consistent Return reflects funds’ historical
    risk-adjusted returns, relative to peers. Ratings for Consistent
    Return are computed for all Lipper classifications with five or
    more distinct portfolios and span both equity and fixed-income
    funds (e.g., large-cap core, General U.S. Treasury, etc.). The
    ratings are subject to change every month and are calculated
    for the following periods: three-year, five-year, ten-year, and
    overall. The overall calculation is based on an equal-weighted
    average of percentile rankings of the Consistent Return metrics
    over three-, five-, and ten-year periods (if applicable). The highest
    20% of funds in each classification are named Lipper Leaders for
    Consistent Return, the next 20% receive a rating of 4, the middle
    20% are rated 3, the next 20% are rated 2 and the lowest 20%
    are rated 1.

    Lipper Leaders Methodology PDF
  • Thanks for digging around, but it is still sorta black box.

    I skimmed through their winners and some of them are very interesting, and beat funds I currently own.

    There is another Crossing Bridge winner CBRDX which they dump into General Bond funds ( along with a clearly high yield Fund RNHIX) It is focused on "Responsible Credit" so I guess it is a general Bond Fund.

    There lists make more sense to me than Morningstar's which are usually dozens of funds long and include many many load funds

    However,they also seem to award many Fidelity Advisor funds without mentioning the same fund available in a different class
  • edited March 20
    I quickly scanned the list of 2025 Lipper Fund Awards.
    The "best" funds (10 years) in the International Large-Cap Core, International Large-Cap Growth,
    and International Large-Cap Value stood out as being very good funds I was somewhat familiar with.
    They are MFS International Equity Fund, WCM Focused International Growth Fund,
    and Artisan International Value Fund respectively.
    I'll need to examine this list further.
  • BISAX is tops in Small International, appropriately so. Artisan International Value has slowed way down recently probably due to asset bloat

    Brandes and Dimensional are their top equity families. Very interesting



  • edited March 21
    Artisan is usually conscientious regarding mutual fund capacity management.
    ARTKX closed to most new investors in 2007, reopened in 2009, and then closed again in 2011.
    The fund briefly reopened in March 2020 but was subsequently soft-closed in June 2021.

    M* places ARTKX in the Foreign Large Blend category.
    The fund has generated top decile returns for the trailing 3 year, 5 year, 10 year, and 15 year periods.
    https://www.morningstar.com/funds/xnas/artkx/performance

    Edit/Add¹:
    "The strategy's asset base of USD 46.6 billion as of September 2024 was sizable,
    but its long-term orientation, large-cap emphasis, and quality focus help alleviate concerns.
    In recent years, the team has suppressed some holdings information to protect liquidity
    when it's entering and exiting positions.
    And finally, the fact that this group no longer supports the USD 29.4 billion Artisan Global Value
    strategy gives the team more leeway than it had before the 2018 team split."



    ¹ M* take on ARTKX asset base size
  • @sma3 and @Observant1: I'm not leaving CBLDX or NRDCX because I think CB is looking out for my capital. Still holding OSTIX, also.

    For LC international value, Brandes is my choice. BIEAX or its clone BINV are as highly rated as BISAX, do not suffer from asset bloat, and have the same long-term team successfully running them. Seems like a quality shop, maybe flying under the radar.
  • edited March 23
    I took a quick peek at BIEAX.
    There have been three years since 2015 where the fund's corresponding category and index had losses.
    BIEAX outperformed both on all three occasions.
    However, the fund did suffer a 2.05% loss in 2020 while the calendar/index gained less than 1%.
    Three of the portfolio managers have over 15 years tenure on the strategy (BIEAX inception date: 01/31/2011).
    The fund generated top decile returns for the trailing 3 year, 5 year, and 10 year periods according to M*.
    https://www.morningstar.com/funds/xnas/bieax/performance


    Edit/Add: I almost forgot that Brandes International Equity was featured in a recent Barron's article.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/top-stocks/international-stocks-are-beating-the-u-s-how-one-fund-is-playing-it/ar-AA1Bdcw6
  • @Observant1: I saw only the summary of Barron’s article on Brandes posted by the indefatigable YBB. I no longer subscribe, but thanks for the link.
  • @BenWP - Note that the link provided by @Observant is channeled through msn.com. You might be able to access it if you're interested.
  • fundly said:

    Kudos and a big thank you to Dr. Snowball who has reviewed and brought to our attention the Sherman run funds at Riverpark and Crossingbridge. I have been very satisfied with the multiple funds Sherman runs that I own and he deserves this award without question!

    I believe you, though I don't own them. The expense ratios are the issue for me. Too high.
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