Thornburg Value Manager Could Be the Next Bill (Miller)
Who says two weeks is an eternity in Internet time?
Many of you have written in wondering what to do about Kevin Landis' pick for the stock to own in 2000. (Proving sarcasm is not in short supply on the Net, one reader says simply, "If you see Kevin Landis again, please tell him thanks for the LGTO recommendation.") Yep, investors dumped Legato Systems (LGTO Quote) when the developer of data backup and recovery software failed to meet fourth-quarter earnings expectations and announced it was changing accounting practices. Dumped may be the nice way of putting it -- the stock lost nearly half its market value in a single morning. Here's the word from Steven Witt, spokesperson for Landis' Firsthand Funds: "I thought the time frame for this choice was a year, not two weeks! Look, companies miss quarters." And Landis is apparently hanging on tight. To those of you who thought this was a pump and dump, far from it. Legato still makes up about 1.5% of his Firsthand (TVFQX Quote)Technology Value, the top-performing fund for the past five years.In selecting a stock, the question is, What's the next America Online (AOL Quote)? In picking a fund it's, Who's the next Bill? Bill Miller of Legg Mason (LMVTX Quote)Value Trust, that is. He's the investor who bet on AOL when its price was in single digits (on a split-adjusted basis) and rode it and several other smart picks to blow past the S&P 500 index every year for the past decade -- the only active manager to do so. Here's my answer: Bill Fries of Thornburg (TVAFX Quote)Value. Yep, like that other Bill, he calls himself a value guy. And while he also isn't afraid to go where traditional bargain hunters fear to tread, he too consistently racks up record returns, even when value is out of favor. (When hasn't it been recently?) But in the toughest test -- last year's charging mo-mo, go-go market -- his Thornburg Value churned out a 37% return. And the one-and-a-half-year-old Thornburg (TGVAX Quote)Global Value, which Fries also manages, was up 63%. But despite Thornburg Value's chart-topping performance year in and year out (it ranks in the top fifth of its category without fail and has delivered nearly 30%, on average, every year for the past three years), the fund is still basically unknown. It has only half a billion dollars in assets under its belt, compared with Legg Mason's $12 billion.
| Thornburg Value's Smooth Ride | ||
| Year | Return | % rank in category |
| 1999 | 37.4% | 13% |
| 1998 | 22.3 | 11 |
| 1997 | 33.7 | 18 |
| 1996 | 37.8 | 1 |
| Source: Morningstar | ||
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