tool name

close
tool goes here

Lessons from skipping a big investment conference

For most people, the start of summer turns their thoughts to barbecues, beaches and vacations.

Published: June 26, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDTUpdated: June 26, 2012 at 6:33 a.m. PDT
0 comments

For most people, the start of summer turns their thoughts to barbecues, beaches and vacations.

For me, however, it’s about mutual funds, managers and expense ratios, as for 16 years my summer hasn’t started without a trip to Chicago for the Morningstar Investor Conference.

For the first time since 1995, this year was different, as unforeseen circumstances forced me to miss the Morningstar event – considered by many to be the year’s best gathering of fund managers and investors.

Oh, I heard plenty about the goings on, and missed chatting with the sharp minds there, but being absent from what I have for years considered a must-see and must-do event had its advantages. It made me think about how easy it is to become myopic, swallowed up by things that seem so important to fund investors without really adding much to the bottom line.

In fact, missing the Morningstar Investor Conference reinforced a few lessons that I would have overlooked had I been there.

If you’re an average investor – the kind who will probably never go to a three-day summit on investing styles and strategies – you’ll be better served by keeping these ideas in mind, rather than trying to act and invest like the sharpies who attend these meetings.

Most of the time, even a “big day” for the market is a forgettable event.

Recently, as the stock market was having its second-worst day of the year amid reports that credit ratings for financial stocks were taking a beating, the temptation was to do exactly what happens when any herd of savvy investors gather, namely trying to find meaning in “what just happened.”

I talked to one fund manager at Morningstar and he said the day’s market action had everyone talking “but it’s not like they’ll be here next year saying, ‘Wow, remember that big day from last year and how it changed everything.’”

There are very few days in market history that truly are memorable. What matters – what you’ll remember as you look back over time — is the long-term trend, and whether or not you were able to capture it and ride it through the daily volatility in order to reach your goals.

If you miss out on every new investment theme or strategy while it’s new, you’re not really missing out: The Morningstar conference is a place where pros get together to talk mostly about what’s working, and how to make it work better. Alas, that’s a moving target, and there are countless examples of hot money managers and interesting strategies that made a splash one year and were never really heard from again.

There aren’t really any new ideas left under the investment sun, just different ways to execute existing strategies. While everyone loves the idea of “new and improved,” it’s also another way of saying “green and unproven.”

If you wait a little bit, you’ll find out whether the strategy can be described as “tried and true.” It doesn’t reach that status until it’s being talked up at events such as Morningstar for several years in a row.

You never know how a fund company is spending your money if you don’t look for it: Go to virtually any investment conference and you’ll find lots of goodies in the exhibit hall, from fancy pens to stuffed animals, T-shirts, hats, chances to win big prizes and more.

You, the fund shareholder, pay for that junk; you just don’t know it.

I like to compare the things being given away in the exhibit hall to a fund’s expense ratio and performance. If a firm gives away fancy freebies while charging above- average fees, it’s more interested in making a good impression on the next customer than it is on serving its current shareholders.

If you don’t go looking for the excesses – so readily visible at big investment shows – you won’t have a clear picture of how the fund is spending your money.

There has yet to be an investment strategy the average investor can’t live without: Had I been in Chicago, I might have listened to discussions on managed futures, or “modern portfolio theory in a non-normal world,” or listened to fund managers talk about whether it’s a good time for technology, emerging markets, bonds and more.

Those are like financial crack to a fund junkie like me.

The average person, however, is not high on funds, and simply wants to get from now to their goals.

While they might benefit from knowing more about the subjects talked about at these events, they will benefit more from knowing themselves, their risk tolerances and their ability to implement and stick with a plan.

Sure, you can get tips at an investment conference, but whether you are getting advice from some meeting with pros or from the guy in the next chair at the barber shop, it’s important to remember that good plans are built for the long haul, and they don’t need to be altered just to be in keeping with the topic of the day.

Chuck Jaffe is senior columnist for MarketWatch. He can be reached at cjaffe@marketwatch.com or at Box 70, Cohasset, MA 02025-0070.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • ‘Unloved’ funds urged as strategy to embrace

    It’s IRA time, with people opening individual retirement accounts after doing their tax returns and then fretting over where to invest the new money.

  • In or out? How to act with the market at all-time highs

    With the stock market at all-time highs, investors are in the classic situation of having an angel on one shoulder and a devil on the other. The problem is that most investors can’t tell who is who, which emotion is wearing the wings versus the horns.

  • There is more to evaluating your funds than average annual returns

    Whether your investments are limited to an employer retirement plan or you coordinate holdings across a variety of accounts, at some point you likely evaluate your choice of investments based on their reported average annual returns.

  • Seeing the ghosts of mutual funds passed

    Counting all share classes, the bell tolled for about 1,000 traditional mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that were liquidated or merged out of existence in 2012. In the spirit of year-end retrospectives about famous people who died in the past 12 months – it’s time to dip into the year’s dead pool for tales from the fund crypt.

  • With the market up, you might want to make bear-market bet

    The stock market at record levels – despite economic storm clouds – can be a test for investors.