5.31.2008

Portfolio Update 5/30/08: Comin Back

The portfolios look like they're comin' back, but they have work to do to make up for last week's brutality.


WylieMoney rose half as much as the S&P 500. My IRAs had a good week despite a rough Friday.


WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed

WylieMoney Slowly

Lazy 20 Mostly Index
Three Fund Index

ETF 20

S&P 500


5.25.2008

Fund of the Week: DJP iPath Dow Jones-AIG Commodity Idx TR ETN

For the second time this month, DJP iPath Dow Jones-AIG Commodity Idx TR ETN had the best one week performance, up 1.60%. It was the only fund up more than 1% and was up more than twice as much as the second best fund, BTTRX American Century Target Mat 2025 My Post , which was up 0.71%.

The rest of the funds in positive territory for the week were bond funds.

DJP also has the best year to date performance of the 90+ funds I track.

Most of the funds were down with SSREX SSgA Tuckerman Active. REIT My Post suffering the biggest loss at -5.09%. All the Real Estate Funds in my portfolios were in the bottom 10 for the wee.


5.24.2008

Portfolio Update 5/23/08: Driven to Tears

When the best performing portfolio in my experiment is down over 2% in 5 days, I'm almost driven to tears.

This is the first week out of the last 52+ updates when the best performng and worst performing portfolios were the same for Friday's performance, the previous week's performance, performance since May 1st, 2007, and year-to-date.


And no surprise to me, the best performing was the WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed portfolio and the worst performing portfolio was the S&P 500 as represented by an investment in SPY. Not that the WylieMoney 20 portfolio only beat the Lazy 20 portfolio by .01%.


WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed

WylieMoney Slowly

Lazy 20 Mostly Index

Three Fund Index

ETF 20

S&P 500


5.18.2008

Fund of the Week: PRNEX T. Rowe Price New Era

Year to date, Emerging Markets funds have struggled after a very strong run, but they had a good week placing 4th, 3rd and 2nd in weekly performance. The top performing fund of the week was PRNEX T. Rowe Price New Era.

I hold PRNEX in my IRA. I did not choose it for the WylieMoney slowly portfolio since I did not choose Natural Resources as one of the Categories for my experiment.
Also it is not a no fee fund so one could not add small amounts to it on a regular basis, efficently.

Real Estate also had a good week as did Mid Cap Growth.

Top 10

Bonds struggled a bit as did DJP a "Natural Resource" ETN I added to my IRA this year. How can funds investing in Natural Resources be in the top 10 and bottom 10 at the same time?

DJP is a pure commodites play with a significant sector weighting in food. PRNEX is more of a energy/industrial materials play (scroll down to sector weightings). I added DJP to my IRA because it is different, but it is loosly lumped in the "Natural Resources" category.

Bottom 10

5.17.2008

Portfolio Update 5/16/08: I'm On Fire

The WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed portfolio caught spring fever in March and stated "I'm on Fire."

Remember how things looked back on March 7th, 2008?:


Back then, the WylieMoney Mostly Managed portfolio was -4.05% since May 1, 2007 and -7.35% year to date. This Friday, the WylieMoney portfolio was up 5.39% since May 1, 2007 and up 1.62% year to date. I'm not tracking from the lowest point to the highest only comparing the values I documented in these weekly updates (scroll to the bottom).

Trying to time the market is impossible. Who would have thought with oil spiking to $126 a barrel, continued trouble in housing, news reports about financial aid for college drying up, and personal credit issues coming to the forefront, that diversified portfolios would gain about 10% in just over 2 months?

Despite the weakest 1 week performance of the bunch, The WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed portfolio has the highest return since this experiment began and the best return year-to-date.

It is interesting to note that the WylieMoney Slowly portfolio which invested in many of its funds when the markets were lower than May 1st, 2007 is still underperforming the WylieMoney 20. It would have been better to invest all $50,000 on May 1st 2007, despite the ugly ups and downs of the past 13 months, then try to dollar cost average into the same funds over that same period...

At least using these funds, over this time period, both indexing and dollar cost averaging have proven less successful than picking a group of mostly managed funds, and riding out the storm.

WylieMoney 20 Mostly Managed

WylieMoney Slowly

Lazy 20 Mostly Index

Three Fund Index

ETF 20

S&P 500


5.13.2008

Why I Blog About Mutual Funds

On January 19th, 1996, I walked into my bank and asked for help investing my savings. The 'salesman' I met sold me some funds with a song and dance about his recommendation being a good portfolio for someone my age with my risk tolerance.

At the time, I knew nothing about investing, so I did not know that there were reasonable alternatives that did not entail 5% back end sales loads and absurd expense ratios (all four of these terrible funds have expenses over 1 1/2%).

Here is what I was sold:

$1000 Putnam New Opportunities 28.629 shares PNOBX
$1000 Putnam Global Growth 102.249 shares PEQBX
$4000 Putnam Growth and Income 251.731 shares PGIBX
$2000 Putnam Voyager Fund 139.958 PVOBX

Not only did I pay way more than necessary, I missed out on huge gains that many other mutual funds were racking up. Most other funds in the same categories these 4 funds invest in would have been better options.

Had I held on to those funds, my initial investment would be worth $15,120.25 today. That is not even double my original investment for a diverse portfolio invested in equities for over a decade.

I'm not going to go on a rant about Putnam. These days you can google Putnam and easily find out how well it is doing.

I watched my funds lag their peers during the hot 90's market and on March 3rd, 2000 I sold them and invested in a portfolio of Janus funds.

My timing could not have been worse.

Seriously.

I missed the peak of the dot.com bubble by 3 days.

Here is what I bought:

That's right- I'm sitting on a 29.70% loss, 8 years later. Maybe I should link to this post instead of my current disclaimer!

What upsets me more than that loss, however, is the $@!#@#* who sold me those terrible Putnam Funds.

"Why?" you might ask, "At least with the Putnam Funds, you would have made money."

Yes, I answer, but had I known in 1996, what I knew in 2003, which was not much about economics or timing, but a bit more about low cost no-load funds... and invested my $8000 in 4 roughly equivalent Janus funds from the group of Janus funds I actually bought in 2000...


...I would have more than tripled my investment.

My current approach for non-retirement investing is to invest in no-load, no-fee funds with low expenses that have a long record of doing well in their respective categories compared to their peers and indexes. I pick funds from different fund families when all other things are roughly equal. And I pick funds that allow $100 or lower subsequent investments so I can add to each fund consistently over time.

I have actually held on to JAGIX, JAMRX and JAENX. I traded in JAWWX for JAOSX a while ago. And by adding to those funds, I have made up some ground.


The experience of getting hosed by my bank and then getting wupped by bad timing provided incentive for me to learn more about investing. I'm not sure I have the right formula now, but I feel much better about my approach and am learning more all the time.

5.12.2008

Adding Short Term Bond fund APST to WylieMoney Slowly Portfolio

Today is the day I'm adding a Short Term Bond fund to WylieMoney Slowly Portfolio. As I noted before, I 'm adding APSTX American Performance S/T Inc N/L My Original Post.