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Financial Planning
July 1, 2005
Israelsen & McDonough
Bet Your BIPY In an ongoing quest to refine which strategies work best in the battle between growth and value investments, this article goes further to examine tactical asset allocation approaches using growth indexes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
May 1, 2005
Israelsen & McDonough
Gaming the System Investors can use last year's middle-performing value index to produce excellent results this year. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
June 1, 2009
Craig L. Israelsen
The Value Premium While industry experts might be trumpeting growth as the place to be when the market rebounds, advisors should remember that longer-term, the market values value. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
December 1, 2005
Craig L. Israelsen
Keeping it in Perspective How often and by how much does growth outperform value? mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
June 1, 2005
Craig L. Israelsen
Three's Not a Crowd How passive fund investors can get the best exposure to the whole U.S. market. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
September 1, 2006
Craig L. Israelsen
Alpha Up and Down If you select mutual funds on the basis of their alpha, you may want to check how consistent those alphas really are. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
April 1, 2013
Craig L. Israelsen
Value vs. Growth: Which Investing Strategy Is Better? How do returns from these two types of equities compare? We test them - and find a real difference in performance. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
August 1, 2006
Craig L. Israelsen
Alpha in the Box The search for Shangri-La pales in comparison to the quest for funds that consistently deliver high alpha. The fundamental question for financial advisors: Does alpha differ across the nine Morningstar style boxes? mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
March 2005
Craig L. Israelsen
Benchmark Checkup Comparing equity mutual fund returns to an index can be very deceiving. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
April 1, 2006
Israelsen & McDonough
Max Your MIPY Advancing the argument for reallocating to the prior year's middle-performing index fund. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
January 1, 2006
Craig L. Israelsen
Think Inside the Box The many investments within a style box are not all alike. Market-cap variance can lead to significant performance differences within style boxes -- particularly among large-cap funds. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
May 1, 2006
Israelsen & Walker
Evening the Odds A significant flaw in many active-versus-passive studies occurs when tallying the number of funds that under- or out-perform an index. Three steps could help level the playing field in the active-versus-passive debate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2005
Israelsen & Clement
Of Stocks and Funds Financial advisers need to explain to their clients that diversification can be a double-edged sword; protection against loss can sometimes insulate against return. Here's a performance comparison of individual stocks vs. equity funds in 2004. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
October 1, 2011
Craig L. Israelsen
Multiply Returns by Dividing Gaining exposure to U.S. stocks by using three equally weighted index funds produced better performance than a single mega-market index fund during the Lost Decade of 2001 to 2010. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
April 1, 2010
Craig L. Israelsen
Size Matters U.S. equity mutual funds do not mirror the overall domestic stock market. That isn't necessarily bad, it's just the way it is. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
October 2, 2007
Craig L. Israelsen
Smoothing the Path When comparing active and passive management, financial planners should look at the performance of the whole portfolio. What you find may surprise you. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2012
Brian J. Lazorishak
Mid-Cap, Big Return Over a 10-, 20- and 30-year period ending last year, mid-caps (generally defined as issues with market capitalizations of $1 billion to $15 billion) have outperformed both large-caps and small-caps on an absolute basis. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 13, 2007
Amanda B. Kish
The Perfect Mutual Fund Portfolio Owning fewer funds just makes sense. But now the question remains -- exactly how many funds do you need to adequately diversify your portfolio? mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
April 1, 2006
Susan B. Weiner
The Middle Ground Mid-cap stocks have yet to command as much respect from advisers and investors as their small- and large-cap peers. Now mid-cap stocks find themselves in an unusual place -- the spotlight -- after a strong showing in 2005. mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
January 2006
Callahan & Howard
Risky Business The primary goal of financial advisors is to make life less risky for clients. But using style boxes to determine risk in a portfolio is a fool's errand. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
February 1, 2012
Craig L. Israelsen
Mid-Cap's Role Mid-cap U.S. equity is almost always included when advisors and investors assemble diversified portfolios. One way to see if this popularity is justified is to do an in-depth survey of mid-cap funds, and to see how these funds affect portfolio performance. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
May 1, 2008
Craig L. Israelsen
Mega Protection The performance of U.S. stocks in 2007 resembled, to a surprising degree, the performance of stocks in 2000 -- a year widely perceived as a bear market. One big difference, however, was the performance of mega-cap stocks. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2007
Craig L. Israelsen
Tales of the Tape When you look at annual returns, stocks, equity mutual funds and indexes tell surprisingly different stories. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
February 1, 2005
Israelsen & Farr
Now You See It... Domestic small-cap equity funds, particularly those with a value tilt, are a fundamental component of any well-designed equity portfolio. The trick is finding ones that are for sale. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
November 1, 2006
Craig L. Israelsen
Alpha Goes Abroad Excess returns turn up in overseas large-cap value funds. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2006
Craig L. Israelsen
Hidden Measures How did U.S. stocks perform versus U.S. equity mutual funds last year? The market-cap bias in measuring stock returns tends to obscure the true return picture. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 11, 2010
Amanda B. Kish
Do You Own This Top-Performing Investment? Mid-cap stocks can give you much better than middling returns. mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
April 2006
Kathleen M. McBride
Anything but Middling Munder's Mid-Cap Core Growth Fund's Tony Dong has prospered by finding growth wherever. mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
January 2006
Callahan & Howard
Boxes Are Not Classes Advisors who use style boxes as proxies for asset classes are performing a disservice to clients. Here's why characteristic boxes are not asset classes and allocating among various characteristic boxes is useless at best. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 20, 2006
Doug Short
Competing With the S&P 500 If you want to increase your chance of beating the S&P 500 year after year, one good way is to broaden your investment choices to include a generous mix of smaller caps and international equities. Mutual funds and ETFs offer an easy means to get that degree of breadth. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2006
Donald Jay Korn
Weight Watchers New equity indexes, weighed by fundamental factors, are challenging the conventions of passive investing. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
March 1, 2012
Craig L. Israelsen
Small Thoughts The benefit of investing in small U.S. stocks is clear. Over the 42-year period from Jan. 1, 1970, to Dec. 31, 2011, a $10,000 investment in large U.S. stocks would have grown to $507,362. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
March 2011
Marla Brill
New Indexes Nudge Out Old Favorites Advisors who have moved into alternative indexes are finding unique ways to use them. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
July 1, 2010
Craig L. Israelsen
Alpha and Beta Can a portfolio consisting entirely of beta-producing elements produce alpha? The answer is clearly yes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
October 1, 2013
Craig L. Israelsen
Should Clients Avoid Bonds Now? With rates inching upward, some clients may want to skip fixed-income investments entirely. They shouldn't. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
November 1, 2007
Craig L. Israelsen
Proposition Three The number of target-date funds continues to grow, but there remains only one set of benchmarks. Here are three proposed indexes to fill the void. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
July 1, 2012
Craig L. Israelsen
Material World The natural resources mutual fund sector has a number of attractions, but one characteristic that is probably not immediately evident to many investors is that these funds do not correlate closely with broad stock indexes. This, it turns out, is a valuable feature. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
February 2008
Craig L. Israelsen
A Better Mousetrap Target date funds are here to stay. As a result of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, target date funds will likely become the auto-enrollment default option in tax-deferred retirement plans. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
August 1, 2012
Joel Bruckenstein
Scrutinizing Investing Style Zephyr Associates' StyleAdvisor has been around since the early 1990s, and it's evolved with the times to be more sophisticated and more comprehensive, yet also easier to use. mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
March 1, 2006
Stan Luxenberg
The Problem of Success If you overweighted clients' small-cap stock funds exposure a few years back, you're looking like a genius. But what now? Anyone seeking a small-cap choice faces a hard problem: Nearly all the top candidates have been closed. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 19, 2011
Dan Caplinger
You Probably Just Bought These Stocks More index moves demand investor attention. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
September 1, 2006
Scott A. Leonard
The Smaller, the Better Rumors that the small-cap effect is dead are most definitely premature. By focusing on the smallest of the small caps, financial advisors can see that the small-cap effect appears to be alive and well. You just need to know where to look for it. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
October 28, 2010
Suzanne Woolley
A 401(k) Funds Popularity Contest A look at which actively managed mutual funds shepherd the most retirement assets, how well they do it, and where they are putting your money. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 9, 2007
Amanda B. Kish
Are "Excellent" Funds Foolish? Part 2 This five-part series takes a closer look at the 24 funds highlighted in the 2007 Business Week/Standard & Poor's Excellence in Fund Management Awards. Mid-cap growth... Two good small-cap picks... mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
June 1, 2009
Richard A. Ferri
Mapping Indexes Today's advisors can best serve their clients with a working knowledge of the various index methodologies. Unfortunately, this is no easy task. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
October 2004
Alan Lavine
Pondering The Fate Of Mid-Cap Stock Funds Is the market rotating away from this once-hot sector? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 11, 2009
Dan Caplinger
Don't Ignore These Winners in 2010 Overlooking mid-cap stocks can cost you big profits. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 28, 2007
Amanda B. Kish
Are Your Funds Really Performing? It's not enough to simply pick good mutual funds and hope that your money will grow. You need constant evaluation and comparison to keep your investment program on track. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
February 1, 2007
Steve Savage
Short-Term Slumps Many great managers share common traits, including a willingness to own unpopular names, to make decisions based on long-term analysis and to maintain the discipline to ignore painful shorter-term market swings. This ability to ignore painful shorter-term swings is being tested as we speak. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Planning
December 1, 2005
Donald Jay Korn
Seven-Year Hitch? Small-cap stocks have been big winners ever since the last century, but keeping the good times rolling could be a major challenge for financial planners. mark for My Articles similar articles