Gains Climb at Scrappy Small-Cap Rockland Growth
| |
Let the Sun Shine In
More on the push for openness in the industry: Good move by Standard & Poor's to kick two Putnam Investments mutual funds off its "select" list. (See our recent story.) The problem isn't performance, but disclosure. Seems funds can only get a spot on the list if they disclose their holdings frequently. And Putnam's standard of twice a year (the bare minimum mandated by the Securities and Exchange Commission) just doesn't cut it. The defense by most fund companies that refuse to reveal their holdings more often is that they don't want investors to trade on this info. That's bull. Even for a market mover like (FMAGX Quote)Fidelity Magellan, it doesn't hurt to have a more open policy. Right now, stocks trade on rumors that a fund is buying or selling. Better to have the facts out there, so we as fund holders can better judge our investments, and all investors can get the truth instead of just the scuttlebutt. Not true, says Reader J.T. Boss, who takes me to task a bit for last week's column applauding the moves by the OpenFund to post its portfolio holdings and changes in real time on the Web. He writes: "Okay, that's it, now Brenda has gone completely insane! After all, would she want her husband to suspiciously question the doctor's every move during their daughter's birth? Or how about pestering a mechanic with an unending stream of whys during a motorcycle tune-up?" What do you think?- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,339.55 | 1,098.98 | 2,184.77 | 34.91 |
Oil *
73.29
|
|
DOWN
101.57
|
DOWN
10.20
|
DOWN
22.14
|
DOWN
1.05
|
10 Yr
3.49%
SPDR Gold
108.18
|
|
-0.97%
|
-0.92%
|
-1.00%
|
-2.92%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |














