Cornerstone Total Return Fund Inc. (The)
Find Ratings Reports- Last Ratings Update:02/29/2024
- Price as of 02/29/2024 :$7.26
- Net Assets:$717.79 Million
- NAV:$6.74
- Premium7.72%
- Peer Rank:363 of 397
- Investment Rating:D
- Performance:C-
- RiskC
We rate Cornerstone Total Return Fund at D. Negative factors that influence this rating include a below average total return. The fund invests approximately 100% of its assets in stocks and may be considered for investors seeking an Equity Income strategy.
Total return ranks below peers over the last three years. The Cornerstone Total Return Fund has returned an annual rate of 6.43% since inception. More recently, the fund has generated a total return of 9.24% in the last five years, -0.03% in the last three years, and 15.90% in the last year. How does that compare to other equity funds? In the last five years, it has outperformed 70% of them. It has also outpaced 36% of its competitors on a three year basis and 69% of them over the last year for the period ending 2/29/2024. On a year to date basis, CRF has returned 6.93%.
Downside risk has been above average. CRF has a draw down risk of -52.84%, which is the largest price decline experienced over the last three years. This fund has a three year standard deviation of 34.6%. This fund has experienced excessive volatility in its monthly performance over the last 36 months.
High expense ratio hinders performance. On total assets of $717.80 million, CRF maintains a high expense ratio compared to its Equity Income peers of 1.16% to cover all operating costs. Brokerage costs for the fund to buy and sell shares are not included in the expense ratio. As CRF is a closed end fund, it has no front end or back end load.
Manager tenure is a net positive but performance record lags managerial peers. Substandard fund managers tend to be replaced, so a long tenure is usually a good sign that a fund is achieving its objectives. The Cornerstone Total Return Fund has been managed by Ralph W. Bradshaw for the last 23 years. Over that period, the manager was able to capture more actual gains in excess of the expected return than just 13% of other fund managers.