6 COMMON INVESTMENT STRATEGIES OF FUND MANAGERS
The criteria
that mutual fund managers use to select their assets vary widely according to
the individual manager. So when choosing a fund, you should look closely at the
manager's investment style to make sure it fits your risk-reward profile.
"Investment style is incredibly important because of the way that investing
works," says Chris Geczy, director of The Wharton School's wealth
management program at the University of Pennsylvania.
"Both risk and return are connected to style. According to current practice
portfolio theory, you can optimize a blend of styles for diversification, balancing
reward and risk."
Here's a look at
a half-dozen common investment strategies among fund managers.
- Top-down investing
- Bottom-up investing
- Fundamental analysis
- Technical analysis
- Contrarian investing
- Dividend investing
Top-down
investing strategies involve choosing assets based on a big theme.
For example, if
a fund manager anticipates that the economy will grow sharply, he or she might
buy stocks across the board. Or the manager might just buy stocks in particular
economic sectors, such as industrial and high technology, which tend to
outperform when the economy is strong.
If the manager
expects the economy to slump, it may spur him or her to sell stocks or purchase
shares in defensive industries such as health care and consumer staples.
Bottom-up
managers choose stocks based on the strength of an individual company, regardless
of what's happening in the economy as a whole or the sector in which that
company lies.
"The great advantage of top-down is that you're looking at the forest rather
than the trees," says Mick Heyman, an independent financial adviser in San
Diego. That makes screening for stocks or other investments easier.
And, "When
you're right, you're really right," says Tim Ghriskey, co-founder of
Solaris Asset Management in Bedford
Hills , New York .
Of course, managers
might be wrong on their big idea. And even if they're right, that doesn't
guarantee they'll choose the right investments.
"A good example is gold," says James Holtzman, a shareholder at Legend
Financial Advisors in Pittsburgh. "That would make sense for a top-down
investor. But what if you're looking at a gold-mining stock and the company is
being run into the ground? The particular stock could be ready to collapse, even
though investing in gold makes sense."
A bottom-up
manager benefits from thorough research on an individual company, but a market
plunge often pulls even the strongest investments down.
(to be contd)
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