Big funds are often plodding performers, but they looked downright sleek in this tough year.
The book on giant funds is that their girth makes them slow-footed. After all, a 1% position in a $10 billion fund adds up to $100 million, and it takes days, rather than hours, to build or unwind positions that big. Imagine Dom DeLuise in a 40-yard dash and you get the picture! Because of their size, huge funds typically spread their mountainous assets among a long list of stocks. That diversification typically earns them a "closet-index" tag as they rise and fall in modest cycles with the market. But that's not a bad thing in a year like this, when many more nimble funds' big bets on individual stocks and sectors led to big losses. As part of our look at how funds performed this year, today the Big Screen zeroes in on the nation's 10 biggest funds. Nine of these have beaten their average peer since Jan. 1, and all of them are doing so over the past three years. The upshot for investors is that this diversified approach isn't necessarily a cop-out and some big fund companies, American Funds in particular, do prove their mettle when times get tough.Oh, They're Big All Right
How big are these funds? The average mutual fund has $300 million in assets and these 10 funds have, on average, $42.6 billion in their coffers. Here they are, ranked by their returns so far this year.|
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| Fund | YTD Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) | Three-Year Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) |
| (PTTAX Quote - Cramer on PTTAX - Stock Picks)PIMCO Total Return | 8.4% | 8% | 6.6% | 4% |
| (AWSHX Quote - Cramer on AWSHX - Stock Picks)Washington Mutual | 0.3 | 12 | 4.4 | 34 |
| (AIVSX Quote - Cramer on AIVSX - Stock Picks)Investment Company of America | -5.2 | 37 | 6 | 23 |
| (ANWPX Quote - Cramer on ANWPX - Stock Picks)New Perspectives | -8.9 | 13 | 7.1 | 21 |
| (FGRIX Quote - Cramer on FGRIX - Stock Picks)Fidelity Growth & Income | -10 | 15 | 0.4 | 43 |
| (AGTHX Quote - Cramer on AGTHX - Stock Picks)Growth Fund of America | -11.9 | 8 | 13.4 | 2 |
| (FMAGX Quote - Cramer on FMAGX - Stock Picks)Fidelity Magellan | -12.4 | 32 | 1.4 | 33 |
| (VFINX Quote - Cramer on VFINX - Stock Picks)Vanguard 500 Index | -12.5 | 34 | -0.1 | 49 |
| (AEPGX Quote - Cramer on AEPGX - Stock Picks)EuroPacific Growth | -13 | 8 | 4.9 | 14 |
| (FCNTX Quote - Cramer on FCNTX - Stock Picks)Fidelity Contrafund | -14 | 56 | 2.1 | 26 |
| S&P 500 | -12.4 | N/A | 3.7 | N/A |
| Source: Morningstar. Returns through Dec. 18. | ||||
Two Words: Sixty Forty
The rest of the funds on this list belong to the large-cap blend category, meaning they focus on a wide range of costly and cheap big-cap stocks. This pack includes the nation's two biggest funds, the $86 billion (VFINX Quote - Cramer on VFINX - Stock Picks)Vanguard 500 Index fund and the $78.9 billion (FMAGX Quote - Cramer on FMAGX - Stock Picks)Fidelity Magellan fund. The others are Fidelity's $31.8 billion (FCMTX Quote - Cramer on FCMTX - Stock Picks)Contrafund and its $34.2 billion (FGRIX Quote - Cramer on FGRIX - Stock Picks)Growth & Income fund. While these portfolios can have slight growth bents, like Magellan, or slight value bents, like Contrafund, they tend to look and perform much like the S&P 500 Index, which is tracked by the Vanguard 500 Index fund, and beat their more aggressive peers over time. This year their returns range from a 10% loss to a 14% loss, right around the index's 12.4% dip, and all but Contrafund are beating their average peer. If one reason for these giants' success is their diversified, somewhat vanilla approaches, another is that funds tend to fall from this list if their style falls from favor. Over the past two years, we've seen the elimination of growth funds that rode tech-heavy portfolios to big gains in 1999 and big losses since then. When the tech-laden Nasdaq Composite peaked in March last year, the (JAVLX Quote - Cramer on JAVLX - Stock Picks)Janus Twenty, (JANSX Quote - Cramer on JANSX - Stock Picks)Janus, (JAWWX Quote - Cramer on JAWWX - Stock Picks)Janus Worldwide and (TWCUX Quote - Cramer on TWCUX - Stock Picks)American Century Ultra funds were on this list.| Slipping These four funds slipped from the biggest-ten list since the Nasdaq's peak last year |
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| Fund | YTD Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) | Three-Year Return | Percentile Rank vs. Peers (1=Best, 100=Worst) |
| (JAVLX Quote - Cramer on JAVLX - Stock Picks)Janus Twenty* | -28.8% | 76% | -5.2% | 77% |
| (JANSX Quote - Cramer on JANSX - Stock Picks)Janus* | -25.5 | 63 | 0.1 | 42 |
| (JAWWX Quote - Cramer on JAWWX - Stock Picks)Janus Worldwide* | -24.6 | 73 | 2.4 | 40 |
| (TWCUX Quote - Cramer on TWCUX - Stock Picks)American Century Ultra | -15.9 | 21 | 0.5 | 37 |
| S&P 500 | -12.4 | N/A | 3.7 | N/A |
| Source: Morningstar. Returns through Dec. 18. *Closed to new investors. | ||||
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