T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
18.1 | | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Sun Jan 26 1992 07:49 | 29 |
| I deal now, or have in the past, with Drefus, Fidelity, Janus,
Lexington, Twentieth Century, and Vanguard. I would characterize
Lexington as not being very customer oriented; interesting, their
performance in all funds is lackluster. Otherwise, all other funds
have been responsive within the bounds that you should expect from a
Fund house as opposed to a brokerage; information on funds, FMV, Your
Funds' Balance(s), etc., but NOT individual stock recommendations.
Each fund's "accessability" on the phone seems relative to the size of
the corporation. Fidelity has additional phone asnwerers on call for
busy times, for instance. All offer "telephone switching trades"
between their own funds (although some have restrictions to keep
activity/expenses down), all will sell (redeem) funds over the phone
and accept wire purchases/sales if you fill out the application
properly.
About the only reason I can think of to purchase a Mutual Fund through
a broker would be if the fund is not offered for sale by the Fund's
management; Mexico Fund, for instance.
Remember, these folks are in a business that is even MORE Customer
Satisfaction oriented that Digital's business. If our customers go
sour on DEC computers, they will seldom pull out all of our equipment,
but will simply stop buying. If a MF's customers go sour, they yank
out assets faster than a speeding bullet (or touch-tome phone). If you
want a case study of top-drawer, company wide marketing, spend some
time researching Fidelity.
Hope this helps,
Dave
|
18.2 | Not for the novice | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon Jan 27 1992 09:55 | 18 |
| > About the only reason I can think of to purchase a Mutual Fund through
> a broker would be if the fund is not offered for sale by the Fund's
> management; Mexico Fund, for instance.
Well, MXF is a closed-end fund and therefore is traded like any stock.
You can't buy it any other way.
Here's two other possiblities:
- Using a broker allows you to deposit your funds as collateral for
margin purposes; you can get 200% invested this way.
- At least one broker will sell you load funds at substantially less
than the load charge imposed by the fund manager. They do this by
maintaining an inventory of funds and reselling them. Seems almost
a shady operation but hey, they advertise in Barron's...
John
|
18.3 | good info ... any more? | BUNDY::LONG | | Mon Jan 27 1992 10:50 | 18 |
|
.1 - That's basically what I was looking for. Thanks.
.2 - That's a little out of my league. I feel like I know the game a little
better than the average novice, but I don't have resources much beyond the
average novice. Maybe someday, hopefully soon ... now where was that "get
rich quick" note ????? :-)
Thanks
Continuing with this theme, how about comments on fund companies, and your
opinions of their providing of good customer service? Another one I'd like
to hear about is CGM. (I know, Capital Development is closed, but Mutual
isn't ...)
Naturally, I'll add my 2 cents on this topic. As soon as I earn my first
2 cents on Janus Twenty, anyway :-)
|
18.4 | Try using a funds MMF in addition | CAMONE::ZIOMEK | Pump up the TEST | Mon Jan 27 1992 13:31 | 18 |
|
Another way to redeem your shares is to have a Money Market account
with checking along with your stock fund. This way you can keep
any extra dollars in the MMF without having to worry about price
fluctuation. And if you decide that you want to get out of the stock
fund simply transfer the money over from the stock fund to the money
market and write a check. The only drawback would be is with some
funds you may need to keep 1,000.00 to keep the money market account
active. Spread out over a number of fund companies, this can get to be
a larger percentage of cash than your investment goals may dictate.
I have this currently set up with Janus, 20th century, and Scudder. The
good thing about the Janus MMF is that if you automatically put in
50.00 a month with their automatic investment program, they waive the
1,000.00 min. initial deposit.
John
|
18.5 | on those busier days... | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Mon Jan 27 1992 13:32 | 20 |
| There is another reason to buy MF's thru discount brokers. On those
busy days, as recently seen, when you can not get thru' to the MF
phone system, you can call your broker (whose lines are easier to get
in my opinion) and do your trade. Depending on the size of your
investment and the market fluctuations, you can justify paying the
broker fees for not missing out the day.
I know, I wished I had bought some of my 20th Century Ultra thru a
broker: I could not get thru' to them in 3 consecutive days and the
market had changed in the meantime not to justify the sale :-(.
As an aside, I have accounts with 4 MF's and their rankings, in terms
of the ease of getting thru' their phone lines is:
Dreyfus
Scudder
Financial Programs
20th Century.
Their performance ranking has roughly been the reverse :-).
|
18.6 | Expectations | CHESS::KAIKOW | | Wed Jan 29 1992 12:09 | 32 |
| re: 18.0
I don't understand this.
You use a discount broker if you want to trade individual stocks, options, etc.
and you do your own portfolio management.
You use a mutual fund if you don't wish to do portfolio management and to better
diversify, among other things.
Of course, you could be in mutual funds and individual stocks, options, etc.
As far as responsiveness is concerned.
Discount brokers don't really do anything for you, i.e. you get what you pay
for.
Most of your contact with a mutual fund company comes in the initial
investigation of the fund before you invest. To do this, you really only need
to make a single phone call to get the latest financial reports and prospectus
(parts A and B).
What can you expect from a mutual fund company?
1. Distribution of financial statements, prospectus (parts A and B) and proxies.
2. Periodic statements of your ownership and dividend reinvestment.
3. Year end tax info, depends on type of fund.
4. Exchange privileges among funds of the same family (a discount broker likely
could offer "exchange" among funds of different families, however, at a
price).
What more should you expect?
|
18.7 | Cutting expenses | MRCSSE::COLMAN | | Mon May 04 1992 15:37 | 19 |
| As a SERPer, I'm contemplating paying $245 for a copy of the Morningstar
CDROM which I would use to SORT the 2400 funds (within fund classes) on
% return as well as on other variables over several time periods (1 to 15
years) and, thereby, selecting the one(s) that seem to have been best most
of the time in the past. I would then invest, via IRA, in one or more of
these mutual funds.
Is this too simplistic a way to cut my investment expenses relative to
using a broker, an advisor/planner, etc. and having to "carry" that
person's one or two percent extra expense. I know that a true expert
would probably be worth his expense in terms of value added; however,
I don't believe I can tell the true expert from the one that has good
"bedside manner" and is just two or three jumps ahead of me in knowing
how to invest. Would I be making a gross error with this go-it-alone
approach?
Knowledgeable inputs would be most appreciated.
george
|
18.8 | | SUBPAC::SEAVEY | | Mon May 04 1992 16:08 | 26 |
| re: .7 -< Cutting expenses >-
Hi George,
I think it is asking too much of statistics to just use past performance
numbers (however allocated) to make decisions on what mutual funds to buy.
In fact, I was in the library yesterday and read the latest Morningstar
summary report which had a good article on this subject by Don Philips,
the publisher. He was explaining their 5 star rating system, and pointing
out its limitations. His main point was that an investor must use many
other considerations - anything from the type of manager to macroeconomics.
In other words, the statistics and numbers are only guidelines, but
bottoms-up and fundamental considerations should still be used.
I'm still debating what to do with my lump sum. I've been leaning toward
a discount broker - say, Waterhouse. This would mean I could get some
closed-end funds, or even stocks:-). Also, I'm not totally convinced that
pure no-load funds are the way to go. Maybe they are too limiting. But,
of course there are those fees, those transaction fees (even if with a
discount broker) and those load fees if it's a load fund. Still, shouldn't
one assume that such fees are the price one pays for having access to a
wider variety of investment options.
Just food for thought. I'm still on the fence.
Mardy
|
18.9 | $245 still looks good to me. | MRCSSE::COLMAN | | Mon May 04 1992 16:50 | 9 |
| Yes, I just discovered the fact that the CDROM includes Morningstar's 5
star rating as part of the CDROM distribution. Notwithstanding the
caution, how wrong can one go by personally ranking the funds on past
history and then ANDing that with the 5 star rating? Sure, there are
always additional factors that should shape the decision. But, as I
asked before, how does one know which advisors are the best if one is
not more expert in the field than the advisors that are being compared?
george
|
18.10 | P.S. | MRCSSE::COLMAN | | Mon May 04 1992 16:52 | 4 |
| and, also, wouldn't the 5 star ranking be based on ALL factors that
Morningstar was aware of?
george
|
18.11 | | SUBPAC::SEAVEY | | Mon May 04 1992 18:30 | 13 |
| re: 18.10 <<< Note 18.10 by MRCSSE::COLMAN >>>
Yes, the 5 star ranking is really great! But.... let me quote a portion
from the lead article in the April 17, 1992, Commentary from Morningstar
which is entitled "Reading the Stars":
"...... First, the ratings are strictly quantitative, based on historical
risk and return analysis. They do not incorporate subjective criteria,
such as an opinion of the manager, or a forecast of which types of securities
will produce the best results. We may discuss such items in the analysis,
but the rating itself remains purely objective."
mardy
|
18.12 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Tue May 05 1992 15:17 | 43 |
| re: .7
>As a SERPer, I'm contemplating paying $245 for a copy of the Morningstar
>CDROM which I would use to SORT the 2400 funds (within fund classes) on
>% return as well as on other variables over several time periods (1 to 15
>years) and, thereby, selecting the one(s) that seem to have been best most
>of the time in the past. I would then invest, via IRA, in one or more of
>these mutual funds.
Do you remember all those warnings about past performance not
guaranteeing future results? Well, it is true, True, TRUE! And the
further back you look, the less correlation there is. In other
words, it might be interesting to know that a fund has performed
well for 15+ years, but its FUTURE performance is more likely to
track the most recent 1-3 or at most 1-5 years. I would expect
that you'd get better results using only 5 years data and even in
that span weighting the more recent data more heavily.
I would also suggest that you NOT do this as a one-time exercise.
Follow your fund(s) closely, looking at their performance
carefully at least once a month, maybe each week. The reason that
past performance doesn't guarantee future result is that things
change. They've changed in the past, which is why more recent
history is more useful. And things WILL change in the future, too.
A fund that is a good choice today may be a sell candidate in x
months.
You mention that you are sorting "within fund classes". Do you
have some criteria for which class(es) you will select from? And
for how you will balance your portfolio among you choices.? This
too is a decision you should re-visit periodically.
Don't take my meaning wrong. The average investor -- even a lot of
above average investors -- won't do well by weekly or monthly
switching of funds. However, I believe that a prudent investor in
mutual funds will benefit by making adjustments from time to time.
>Would I be making a gross error with this go-it-alone approach?
Maybe. But then anybody can make a gross error with any approach.
Any reasonable, systematic approach shifts the odds in your favor.
The very fact that your asking this question indicates that you
are less likely than many people to make a "gross error".
|
18.13 | IRA OR NOT! | WFOV12::CERVONE | | Mon Nov 16 1992 12:15 | 20 |
| I have about 5k I want to put into a Mutual Fund, after carefull
condideration and weekly tracking for about 9 to 10 months I've picked
Janus Twenty. (Not to mention article I've read on the performance on
Janus twenty, and recomendations from anylysts on future performance
perspectus).
I'm still up in the air on wether to invest via IRA or not. Reason
being is, I already have a couple of IRA'S and if I were to have to
withdraw the money for any reason at all I would hate to have to take
the 10% penalty fee on top of the taxs involved.
I beleive I remenber reading in Money that if one opened an account
this year (1992) via Mutual Fund the 10% penalty would be waivered if
for any reason the money was withdrawn. Dont quote me on this one I just
dont remember too clearly.
Comments are more than welcome............
Frank
|
18.14 | IMO, No IRA just yet on Janus 20. | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Mon Nov 16 1992 12:35 | 13 |
| Being a Janus Twenty holder, I like your choice of fund. Money
still rates it the top growth stock fund for long range results.
If you are invested into your 401k, as I'm sure everyone is, then
I'd stay fairly liquid for now and keep it out of the IRA. Being
a stock appreciation fund with low turn-over and no dividends,
you shouldn't see a large taxable impact. If Clinton restores the
IRA deduction next year for all persons, then you might rethink
your situation.
Be sure you contact the fund management and find out when distributions
are given out. If they are close at hand, then plan your buy after
that date. (tax reasons)
|
18.15 | IRAs and Clinton | ROCK::MURPHY | | Mon Nov 16 1992 13:09 | 14 |
| There is a IRA bill being pushed by Sen Bentsen which will allow penalty free
withdrawals for college, medical, or first time house expenses. It hasn't
passed yet. Keep it liquid, and if the bill passes and you fall in that
category of needs, then you can switch.
Ditto on the choice of Funds. I like J20, but I couldn't complain since
I got in on the dip this summer, and it has been jumping the last couple of
months. If you are looking at splitting into multiple funds in the same family,
rather than all in the 20, get a prospectus for their three new funds. I am
interested in the new Enterprise fund, which has mid-cap companies. I think
I'll wait until the annual report comes out the 30th, so I can get a listing
of that funds holdings.
Murph
|
18.16 | Good Fund. But IRA might be limited... | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Wed Nov 18 1992 10:20 | 4 |
| BTW, as far as I know, IRA contributions are still limited to $2000 per
annum, regardless of their tax deductibility.
~K.
|
18.17 | | KEDZ::SOTTILE | Get on Your Bikes and Ride | Tue Dec 29 1992 16:00 | 6 |
|
Is there a directory of phone numbers for mutual funds in this file
somewhere?
Steve
|
18.18 | | SUBWAY::SAMBAMURTY | Raja | Tue Dec 29 1992 20:47 | 8 |
| Not sure about this notes file, but.... most investing magazines
(Money, Forbes, BW, Kiplingers to name a few) review most mutual funds
once a year and the same issue carries all the numbers. Also, Money &
Kiplinger's carry a review of certain categories of funds in every
issue and also list the numbers for the reviewed funds. The Forbes
mutual fund listing happens in the last week of Aug/1st week of Sep.
Money/BW/Kip do it in the earlier part of the year. Of course, if you
want a particular family, I can always look it in my copy...
|
18.19 | | KEDZ::SOTTILE | Get on Your Bikes and Ride | Wed Dec 30 1992 10:31 | 2 |
|
How about Janus???
|
18.20 | | ROCK::MURPHY | John Elway - Girly Mon Supreme! | Wed Dec 30 1992 10:35 | 1 |
| Janus 1-800-525-3713
|
18.21 | for 18.3 CGM | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Thu Jan 07 1993 16:16 | 40 |
| I currently hold all three CGM funds (yes there is a small third fund). The
Capital Development fund was started by my wife before we where married (in
fact before it was it's own company). It was part of the Loomis-Sayles group
before being purchased by Robert Kemp (the fund president) and Kenneth Heebner
(the fund manager). In fact my mother-in-law was Mr. Kemp's personal assistant.
Needless to say I have nothing but great things to say about the company (an
880% return on original investment may have something to do with that). The
majority of our investment capital is currently in this fund, and will continue
in this fund for at least the next ten years. Alas the fund is closed to new
investors, but I'd like to say a couple of things about CGM Mutual and CGM Fixed
Income.
CGM Mutual is a good balanced fund. Balanced is the key word here. Don't look
for the spectacular returns that Capital Development has achieved in it's
history. Do look for great retruns for a balanced fund, with limited down side
risk. The fund is 50% invested in bonds and 50% in growth stocks. The 1993
return was a little disappointing (due mostly to Ken Heebner hold the bond
portion in 30 treasuries a little too long). But it didn't loose money, in
fact it hasn't in the last few years. If you are looking to accent your
portfolio with a little balance it's a great choice.
CGM Fixed Income fund is another good choice for diversification. I dollar cost
avereged up to a little over 12% this year. It doesn't have a track record (it
began last May), but I have high expectations for it. I also would expect it
to have an impact on CGM Mutual. The portfolio mix of CGM Mutual looks like 50%
of the money was invested in the same stocks as Capital Development and 50% in
Fixed Income. Oh almost forgot, that 12% was from May to December.
As far as service, well I'm not sure what you're looking for. If you call CGM
they will send you the application, prospectus, and any information they may have
on hand. If you are a share holder and call about your account, you aren't
technically dealing with CGM. You've called State Street Bank, because that's
who CGM uses to do their record keeping. It wouldn't make sense for them to do
it themselves...that's where expenses of a fund come in (along with brokerage
fees, I believe that CGM uses A.G. Edwards a lot).
So here's to my daughter's education and early retirement!
Michael
|
18.22 | Janus twenty closed to new investors | FLAM01::CONCORDIA | later | Fri Jan 08 1993 14:10 | 3 |
| Just found this out. It closed on Jan 3, 1993
-D
|
18.23 | | QUEK::MOY | Michael Moy, DEC Rdb Engineering | Fri Jan 08 1993 14:37 | 8 |
| re: -1
Unless you requested literature before 93 and received it after 93 or
if you have money in any of their other funds. Under these two
conditions, you can still open Janus 20 if your application is
postmarked by Feb 12, 1993.
michael
|
18.24 | | AUSTIN::RIST | it's all a question of when | Mon Jan 11 1993 13:22 | 8 |
|
I have the option of getting some money into this before it finally
closes (owning shares in other funds). Does its closing make it a
better investment? Is this a golden opportunity?
Can someone explain the implications?
lance
|
18.25 | jump at the opportunity to lock in... | CIVIC::COUTURE | Gary Couture - NH Sales Support | Mon Jan 11 1993 20:58 | 15 |
| re -.1
My opinion is that Janus 20 has an excellent record and most advisors like
its future too. If you have a chance to get into the fund before it closes
DO IT. If you just put in enough to meet the funds minimum balance then you
are locked in forever. Once in you can add to and take away from the fund
at will. As long as you don't close it out or go below minimum you are in.
So even if you are not interested in investing a lot with j20 now, its worth
getting in to give you the option. I've done this with a few funds which I
was interested in and were rumored to be closing to new investors such as
Monetta and Kaufman.
gary
|
18.26 | | SUBWAY::SAMBAMURTY | Raja | Tue Jan 12 1993 08:42 | 7 |
| Janus20 is being run by an excellent manager Tom Marisco. He also runs
the IDEX I, II & III funds (they are the loaded cousins of J20) and
also manages for private clients of the Janus Group. All the major
sources on mutual fund perf rate his funds (the IDEX or the J20) very
highly.
My $0.2 worth...
|
18.27 | Janus 20 overview from annual report | JURAN::SORRELLS | Kramer - Don't drink that milk! | Wed Jan 13 1993 07:13 | 21 |
| Some Janus Twenty holdings as of 10/31/92:
Common Stock - 86%
Treasury Notes (1996-2002) - 8.2%
Mexican Cetes (11/5/92) - 1%
GE Capital Corp Notes - 4.7%
Large Holdings included:
BankAmerica
First Union
Amgen
Phillip Morris
Pfizer
FNMA
Coca-Cola
Intel
Microsoft
Wal-Mart
Telefonos de Mexico SA de CV (ADR)
Except for Coke, J20 holds on the order of $100-200 Million of each
with total net assets of $2.4 billion.
|
18.28 | Closes Feb. 12 | KENT::KENT | Peter Kent, Computer Systems Group-Channels, 293-5129 | Wed Jan 13 1993 21:41 | 5 |
| Morningstar rates Janus 20 a 5 star fund of average risk. It's also a
no load fund and the latest info that I've received is that it will be
closed to new investors as of close of business on Feb. 12.
Peter
|
18.29 | | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Thu Jan 14 1993 09:28 | 9 |
| re: -1
The J20 Fund is already colsed to new investors unless you currently
have an account open with another Janus fund families. If that is the
case, you have until Feb. 12, 1993 to open an account with J20. But, if
you currently do not have any account with the Janus Group of Funds,
then, it's already too late.
Mike
|
18.30 | Unless.. | WONDER::BENTO | Send lawyers, guns and money... | Thu Jan 14 1993 13:28 | 1 |
| You requested a prospectus in 1992 and it was delivered to you in 1993.
|
18.31 | | QUEK::MOY | Michael Moy, DEC Rdb Engineering | Thu Jan 14 1993 13:34 | 4 |
| I have two of the special applications if anyone wants them - I'm in
NUO.
michael
|
18.32 | | QUEK::MOY | Michael Moy, DEC Rdb Engineering | Thu Jan 14 1993 15:14 | 3 |
| I've received requests for both of them so the offer's over.
michael
|
18.33 | I have one for sale - free! | ROCK::MURPHY | Andy Kaufmann never met a shot he didn't like | Fri Jan 15 1993 13:42 | 5 |
| I have a J20 app. that came with the annual report.
John Murphy
dtn 225-4964
|
18.34 | J20 app gone | POKIE::ALCORN | Colorado Springs Sales Support | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:39 | 4 |
| I wasn't fast enough, the J20 application is gone.
I'd like one if anyone else has one.
Diane
|
18.35 | Maybe it means nothing... | WONDER::BENTO | Send lawyers, guns and money... | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:47 | 4 |
| The applications are coded but I'm not sure if they are coded to
prevent application of an account to J20 if the dates aren't right.
-TB
|
18.36 | Application on its way, hopefully. | POKIE::ALCORN | Colorado Springs Sales Support | Fri Jan 15 1993 17:16 | 1 |
| I got an offer for an application. Thanks!
|
18.37 | What's the Appeal of J20, Now? | AKOCOA::GLANTZ | | Mon Jan 18 1993 22:10 | 21 |
| Let's step back a bit and look at the certain trends with Janus 20.
Its 5-yr annualized rate-of-return is 26%. Damn attractive.
Its 3-yr. annualized rate-of-return is 20%. Not bad.
Its 1-yr. return is <10%.
See a trend here?
In 1989, it had assets of $ 68M.
In 1990, it had assets of $ 244M.
In 1991, it had assets of $1348M.
In 1992, it had assets of $3200M.
See a trend here?
Are they linked? Is it possible the declining performance of J20 is
because it's hard to turn a 3 billion dollar battleship?
Perhaps that's why the fund announced it was going to close. Create a
last-chance-to-get-aboard mentality. Should pull in another $300M of
new money, I bet.
|
18.38 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Tue Jan 19 1993 09:56 | 18 |
|
Re: .37
I think the trend of 5-year annualized returns looking real good
followed by the 3-year being nice and the 1-year being so-so is typical
of many mutual funds these days. Remember, the 5-year period right now
would start in January of 1988 which was right after the crash of Oct
87. Stocks were way down and recovered a lot of territory since then.
The last three years include the tail end of that recovery plus some
recession doldrums. The last year has been so-so all around. Most
funds have this kind of 5/3/1-year trend right now.
Actually, out of curiosity, replay the trend numbers pretending
that it is still last summer so that the 5-year numbers include the
crash. The coupling of the asset and return trends won't be so clear
then.
-craig
|
18.39 | J20 return - and Janus Growth and Income fund | ROCK::MURPHY | Andy Kaufmann never met a shot he didn't like | Tue Jan 19 1993 11:07 | 14 |
| Janus 20 had a real bad run in the first half of 1992. That has reversed
largely due to a runup in Intel, Microsoft, and Outback Steakhouse. Since
I got in at the summers low at 21.49 it is at 25 and change (when you include
the distribution). I am happy with the current protfolio. And I am equally
happy (maybe even more so) with the performance and holdings of Janus
Growth and Income fund. It is run by the same manager but is more diverse.
The lack of the 20 comapany format has allowed Marsico not only to hold
Intel and Microsoft, but also some Dell. Plus there are some higher dividend
securities. The only drawback when I entered was that 20 had a ~1% expense
ratio and G&I had a ~2.5. G&I is now down to that level due to increasing
assets. I highly recommend this fund. Since July, from 12.57 to 14.63 (including
6 cents of income distribution). A good alternative to the 20 fund.
Murph
|
18.40 | apples vs apples | NOVA::FINNERTY | | Fri Jan 22 1993 08:49 | 24 |
|
A much better way to compare returns would be to express the return as
the difference between the actual return and the S&P 500 return, and
then subtract off inflation. The result shows what the manager has
really accomplished.
To compare results between funds, you should then subtract off any
loads and management fees...
When you're done with all that, ask yourself if the good results are
due to luck or skill... a manager of a biotech fund did pretty well in
1991, and pretty lousy in 1992, and can't really take much credit or
blame for either. So ensure that when you compare fund A to fund B
that they are in the same investment universe (e.g. don't try to
compare FIDELITY Select Biotech with FIDELITY Select Buggywhip!)
re: Janus 20 size factor
I have heard that studies support what you suspect about fund size.
I haven't read any of these studies myself, but maybe someone else
who has can comment on specific guidelines.
/jim
|
18.41 | J20 app if useable | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Fri Jan 22 1993 15:58 | 12 |
|
I received a J20 application in the annual report as well.
I already hold J20 so I'm not going to use this form. It
does ask on the form what other Janus funds you own. Can
this form be used and accepted by someone that is new to
Janus?
If you're willing to try, then I have an application I won't
be using.
Bob
|