Which Funds Survived the Third Quarter Roller Coaster?
The Third Quarter was another roller coaster ride that almost defied
gravity on the downside and upside. The average general domestic stock
fund was up 1.2 percent, according to
Morningstar.
The S&P 500 (a proxy for large stock performance in the U.S.) was
up a respectable 2.1% (the ETF proxy used in the adjacent chart
outperformed the index, generating a 3.1% return). The small and mid
cap sectors of the U.S. markets did not fare as well.
International
stocks in developed countries persevered and performed well.
Interestingly, many specific country markets were down for the quarter
which validates keeping your international portfolio diversified across
countries and regions.
A substantially weaker dollar bolstered returns
from international investments this quarter so their returns were as
good as or better than that of the S&P. The average foreign stock
mutual fund gained 5 percent for the quarter.
International
emerging-market funds continued on a tear, up 17%. Emerging markets
refers to countries that are under developed and rural in nature. China
and India are countries commonly referred to as having emerging
economies. Growth in these regions has been astronomic (up 35%
year-to-date).
Size mattered this quarter. The more super-sized your portfolio was (weighted toward the biggest large cap equities), the more bang you got for your investments. The strongest growth has occurred abroad this year and the US mega caps that have the largest international component to their earnings. The S&P500 ishares (IVV) generated 3.1% third quarter while the S&P400 MidCaps (IJH) and the S&P600 SmallCap ishares (IJR) fell. International large caps also outperformed international small caps this quarter for the first time in years.
Growth also stole the spotlight, outperforming value
despite capitalization (cap size) and country. S&P500 Growth
ishares (IVW) were up 5% for the quarter while the S&P500 Value ishares
(IVE) gained only 1.7%. This pattern was true for the smaller cap indices
such as the S&P400 and S&P600 ishares, with the value shares
falling and growth shares
holding their value.
The
re-introduction of risk was very apparent in the bond market, with high
quality bonds rising in value and low quality falling. Scared by the
upheaval in the credit markets, investors began piling into
high-quality bonds, drove the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index (BND) up
2.8%, and caused yields to fall. For example, the yield on the U.S.
10-year Treasury note settled at around 4.5%, down from about 5.2% in
mid-June. (Because bonds offer a fixed coupon, their yield--the coupon
rate as a percentage of the price of the bond--shrinks as bond prices
rise.) The popularity of Treasuries (flight to quality) also caused the
Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield Master Index, an index of low-rated
(junk) corporate bonds, to post a modest 0.12% loss for the quarter.
Other
parts of the fixed income markets have not fared as well. The subprime
mortgage-backed market is nonexistent, making it impossible to gauge
the value of many existing securities. Many banks are writing them off
as worthless. Despite this nuclear melt down, the Eaton Vance Institutional Floating Rate has performed well: although it fell 1.8%
for the quarter, it is still up 2% for the year.
Commodity futures
performed well this quarter due to the surge in oil prices, which
breached the $80 a barrel level. The PIMCO Commodity Real Return
Institutional Fund rose 10% in the third quarter generating a
year-to-date return of 13%. The iPath Dow Jones-AIG Commodity Index
(DJP) rose a more modest 6% during the quarter and 10% for the year.
Emerging-market
short-term bonds (PIMCO Developing Local Markets) continue to perform
well despite volatility in the fixed income arena. Year-to-date the
fund is up 4.5% primarily due to declining value of the dollar against
other currencies.
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