Puzzle/Promise of Absolute Return Funds

Mutual fund companies looking to attract investor dollars are betting the magic words today are "absolute return." Since the start of 2010, 12 absolute return funds have been launched, according to Morningstar, bringing to 32 the number of funds with "absolute" in their names. Their names are often one of the few things these funds have in common, except for a complexity that makes evaluating them difficult for all but the most experienced investors.

"Absolute return" is primarily a marketing concept, one that has gained popularity since the recession and stock market crash, says Nadia Papagiannis, alternative investment strategist at Morningstar. Funds labeled "absolute return" follow a broad array of investing strategies and imply investors won't lose money and will always make money, she adds. "It preys upon peoples' fears that another 2008 is going to happen."

These funds use financial instruments—combinations of bonds, derivatives, commodities, currencies and stocks—in strategies designed to produce consistent returns unaffected by broader moves in financial markets. "Absolute return describes the goal rather than the investing strategy," says Joseph Jennings, an investment director for PNC Wealth Management in Baltimore, who uses some absolute return funds in client portfolios. That goal, he says: "Generate positive returns in any market environment and do so with fairly low volatility."

Financial advisers such as Keith Amburgey, chief investment officer at Rutherford Asset Planning, say they're investing in the funds because of worries interest rates will rise and hurt the value of bonds, which traditionally have been relied on to provide consistent steady returns. "If you're worried about interest rates—which we are—you end up turning to these to fill out your portfolio."

In theory, absolute return funds are structured to factor out such market risks as interest rate changes or falling stock prices. To do this, a fund such as the $3.4 billion Absolute Strategies Fund (ASFIX) uses 13 different strategies. The Eaton Vance Global Macro Absolute Return fund (EAGMX), the largest fund, with $7.6 billion in assets, invests in global debt, currencies, and derivatives. A similar approach is employed by the newest absolute return fund, the Legg Mason BW Absolute Return Opportunities Fund (LROAX), which was introduced on Feb. 28. Eaton Vance spokeswoman Robyn Tice notes that it's difficult to compare funds against each other, so investors "need to look under the covers and understand what fund strategies are." Eaton Vance's global macro fund became so popular that the firm closed it to new investors last October, she adds.

Because so many of these funds' returns are young, it's difficult to know if they actually work. Many aim for a positive return over three years or over a "full market cycle." For most of the funds, "you don't have enough of a track record to make a prudent decision," says David J. O'Brien, head of O'Brien Financial Planning in Midlothian, Va. The track record of older funds is mixed: Of the 10 existing absolute funds around in 2008, all but two lost value that year. For example, the Absolute Strategies fund lost 13.5 percent in a year that the Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 38.5 percent.

Potential investors are left to read descriptions of fund strategies carefully and to try to gauge the skill of fund managers. Absolute return funds tend to borrow the approaches of hedge funds, as do other alternative mutual funds, such as those in the "market neutral" or "managed futures" categories.

RSS Feed: Most Read Stories

RSS Feed: Most E-mailed Stories

RSS Feed: Most Discussed Stories

RSS Feed: Most Popular Slide Shows

Buy a link now!

Read Full Article »




Related Articles

Market Overview
Search Stock Quotes