Fund Openings, Closings, Manager Moves: New Fund To Focus On India Tech Stocks
Like small fishing boats straying too far out to sea in hopes of landing big game, some mutual-fund investors are taking big risks in search of fat returns and could end up in deep, um, water.
Investors are pouring more cash than ever before into sector-focused mutual funds -- those that only invest in stocks within one industry sector, such as health care, or a thinner sliver of a sector, such as biotechnology within health care. Here's the danger: While a focused strategy paid off in a once-in-a-blue-moon kind of year like 1999, when the average technology fund turned in a triple-digit return, the scores of investors overloading on sector funds are vulnerable to the sudden downward gusts that often visit volatile sectors. Those occasional slides are a tempest in a tea cup for a diversified portfolio, but they can crush an investor too focused on one or two groups. "It's a loser's game," says financial planner Frank Armstrong, president of Miami-based Managed Account Services and chief investment strategist for DirectAdvice.com. "There's always going to be one sector that's better than others on a given day or year, but it's almost impossible to consistently get that right." To be sure, the boom in sector funds has been a natural offshoot of the technological revolution that is transforming the economy, which has led to outsize performance in the stocks of companies that are fueling the transformation. Sector funds provide an easy way for investors to place a bet on an area with great potential for growth. But it's clear that some investors aren't spreading their money around as much as they used to. Let's go to the numbers: In just the first five months of this year, a whopping $44 billion has poured into the industry-focused crowd, trouncing the $29 billion tally from all of last year, which itself had been a record-setting year for sector-fund flows. Let's go to even more stark numbers: Historically the conventional wisdom on sector funds has been that they spice up a portfolio, but shouldn't comprise more than 10% of your assets. Still it looks like some investors might be blowing right by that 10% target. From 1990 through 1998, sector funds never accounted for more than 4.8% of total flows to U.S. stock funds. But in 1999 that shot up to 19.9%, and in the first five months of this year it's up to a whopping 44.4%, according to Boston fund consultancy Financial Research, or FRC. Before 1998, the record for calendar-year flows to sector funds in the 1990s, after redemptions, was $11.1 billion set in 1993, according to FRC. Sector funds have lapped that record more than four times in the first five months of this year, mainly due to investors ravenous appetite for tech funds.| Sector Fund In- Flows Figures are in billions of dollars. |
| Source: Financial Researach Corporation. YTD data through May 31. |
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