Janus Is Growing a Second Face -- and So Should You
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Following a second tough year for the Denver firm's tech- and telecom-heavy growth funds, last week a quartet of Janus managers told reporters they're not changing the grass-roots research process they made popular in ads and Wall Street lore. But the funds' recent moves indicate that some managers are charting a less risky course as they put their portfolios together. The upshot for Janus shareholders: After the past three years' high highs and low lows, you might see a bit less of each going forward. "In general the portfolios are a lot better diversified than they were in the past," says Christine Benz, the analyst who covers the Janus growth funds for Chicago research house Morningstar. "But investors should keep in mind that in their current positioning they won't be able to deliver the upside some investors are expecting. For the last 90 days tech has been hot, and these funds have been so-so." She's right. Janus offers seven direct-sold, big-cap growth funds, the style it's best known for. Only one, (JAOLX Quote)Olympus, is beating its average peer over the past 90 days, according to Morningstar. On average, the category is up 9% over that stretch, beating traditional tech fans like Janus (up 6.3%) and Mercury (up 6.7%). And the typically high-octane Enterprise fund is up just 2.5%, compared with a 7.7% gain for its average peer. "When you look at Enterprise and Twenty, those funds were pretty aggressive, and I'd say they've really reined in their sector bets," says Benz. The most recent portfolio data for Janus' direct-sold funds date back to April, but more recent numbers on the firm's Adviser family of funds illustrates a broader approach. At the end of July, portfolio manager Scott Schoelzel, manager of the Twenty fund, had 11% of the (JGRTX Quote)Adviser Aggressive Growth fund in tech stocks, compared with a 34% average tech stake over the past three years, according to Morningstar. And Jim Goff, manager of the Enterprise fund, had 14% of the (JARTX Quote)Adviser Capital Appreciation fund in tech stocks on July 31, compared with a 39% average tech bet over the past three years.
| Shrinkage Many Janus funds are losing ground since the Nasdaq top |
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| Janus Fund | Return Since Nasdaq Peak | 1999 Return | Value of $10,000 Invested Jan. 1, 2000** |
| Mercury* | -59.2% | 96.2% | $5,023 |
| Twenty | -54.3 | 64.9 | 4,493 |
| Worldwide | -50.6 | 64.4 | 5,896 |
| Janus | -46 | 47.1 | 5,682 |
| Growth & Income* | -33.2 | 51.2 | 7,072 |
| S&P 500 | -16.2 | 21 | N/A |
| Nasdaq Composite | -59.3 | 85.6 | N/A |
| Sources: Baseline/Thomson Financial. *Closed to new investors. **Assumes liquidation on Oct. 31. | |||
| A Troubled Trio Some Janus holders ask, Where's the brio? |
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| Janus fund | YTD Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) | Three-Year Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) |
| (JAENX Quote)Enterprise | -39.1% | 94% | 2.3% | 81% |
| (JAVTX Quote)Venture* | -15.5 | 66 | 7.8 | 73 |
| (JAVLX Quote)Twenty* | -27.5 | 78 | -2.8 | 71 |
| S&P 500 | -6.5 | N/A | 4.3 | N/A |
| Source: Morningstar. *Closed to new investors. Performance through Dec. 6. | ||||
| Following the Money Janus' parent pushing institutional and adviser sales |
||
| Retail Direct Sales | Adviser-Sold and Institutional Sales | |
| Oct. 25, 2001 | 28% | 72% |
| 2000 | 29 | 73 |
| 1999 | 35 | 65 |
| 1998 | 43 | 67 |
| 1997 | 50 | 50 |
| Source: Stilwellfinancial.com | ||
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