T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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90.1 | | SUBSYS::GANESH | Ganesh | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:18 | 29 |
| It's because of their investment style. All of their funds
are quite aggressive - they buy stocks with "earnings momentum",
they never sell unless the earnings growth slackens. They
don't take their profits and run. Their smaller funds have
a large number of small company stocks which don't usually
pay dividends, so these funds have little or no dividend
to distribute.
When the market tanks, their funds usually sink like rocks
as they are practically always 100% invested. Fear in the
market may lead to massive redemptions by some of the
share-holders, and result in forced liquidation of some
of the funds' stock holdings to meet redemptions. As 1991
was an exceptional year for growth stocks, this was not
a problem - more money walked in than left. I would imagine
they'd be more likely to have capital gain distributions
in a bad year.
I'm not sure what the deal is with Select. Perhaps Select
buys mostly the larger dividend-paying stocks among
those with momentum, which I would imagine represented
a steadily shrinking universe in 1991 - so they had to sell.
- Ganesh.
P.S. The "person" you spoke to sounds wrong. If a fund sells
any of its holdings, it doesn't matter if the proceeds are
reinvested or held as cash - they'd have to compute and
distribute the gains to the shareholders.
|
90.2 | Not for the Faint of Heart | AKOCOA::GLANTZ | | Tue Mar 03 1992 13:17 | 10 |
| To answer the last question in the base note, yes, it is like an IRA
without the restrictions -- all the gains accumulate without annual
slices by the tax man.
On the other hand, as .1 points out, 20th Century has a policy of being
in the market 100% of the time. Let me tell you, when the market tanks,
hold on to your seatbelt -- it's damn scary.
Another fund with great five-year performance numbers but
heart-stopping intermediate stumbles is Kauffman Fund.
|
90.3 | Read the prospectus. | CSC32::B_HIBBERT | When in doubt, PANIC | Tue Mar 03 1992 15:54 | 14 |
|
The funds have slightly different investment objectives. The Select fund is
limited to investing in stocks that pay dividends (they don't have to pay much).
The other funds don't have that limitation, they can invest in any stock and
typically pick growth stocks that tend to not pay dividends. I would expect
the Select fund to have a much higher dividend distribution than the other
funds. Capital gains distribution is based on the profit made from sale of
stocks. If the Select fund had a higher percentage of gains than the other
funds I would expect this distribution to be a larger percentage than the other
funds. The gains distribution may be larger for other funds next year (depends
on what stocks they sell).
Brian
|
90.4 | Kauffman Fund?? | SOLVIT::AR5LGT::MERRILL | Nature is a Mother | Wed Mar 04 1992 13:03 | 10 |
| Rep .2
>Another fund with great five-year performance numbers but
>heart-stopping intermediate stumbles is Kauffman Fund.
The Kauffman Fund has got some mombo jumbo about being call down
by the SEC. in connection with other brokerage firms dealing
in the OTC exchange. (see prospectus) Does anyone know
what this about??? Their prospectus points the finger at other
brokerage firms. If so why is in the Kauffman Fund prospectus???
|
90.5 | Charges | ACETEK::TIMPSON | From little things big things grow | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:36 | 12 |
| Quick question on 20th Century Gowth Fund:
What menthod does 20th Century use to make there paycheck. I know
that it is a no load. Do they use a 12(b)-1 a maintenance fee or
both?
Do they have a minimum buy in?
Thanks
Stevef
|
90.6 | partial answers | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:04 | 20 |
| Re. .5
Note that these answers apply to all 20th Century funds, not just
Growth.
> What menthod does 20th Century use to make there paycheck
I don't understand this question. Could you elaborate?
> Do they use a 12(b)-1 a maintenance fee or both?
I don't think they have any 12(b)-1 fees. They don't have any direct
maintenance fee (except for IRAs), but do see below. They do have
an administrative cost that is directly applied to the earnings of
the fund. This cost has generally been in the <= 1% range.
> Do they have a minimum buy in?
It may be $50 or $100, but they do charge a maintenance fee of $10 per
fund, if the balance in that fund on 31st December is less than $1000.
|
90.7 | more... | ACETEK::TIMPSON | From little things big things grow | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:22 | 16 |
|
>> What menthod does 20th Century use to make there paycheck
>I don't understand this question. Could you elaborate?
You answered the question. What I was saying above was:
What method(s) does 20th Century use to extract there fee for
manageing the Funds.
You replied a 1% take on the earnings.
I understand that correctly this means that if the fund isn
returning 15 % then I will see 14.99% of this or will it be 14%
Steve
|
90.8 | | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:30 | 3 |
| re: .7
15% - 1% = 14%
|
90.9 | Clarification | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Mon Aug 24 1992 10:44 | 15 |
| Re: .7
> I understand that correctly this means that if the fund isn
> returning 15 % then I will see 14.99% of this or will it be 14%
Neither, see below.
and .8
> 15% - 1% = 14%
No, .8 is incorrect. The 1% charge is against the earnings not the
assets, i.e., if the fund earned 15 million dollars on assets of 100
million, the expense would be 0.15 million and not 1.5 million.
Thus, 14.85% is the correct answer.
|
90.10 | Formula | ACETEK::TIMPSON | From little things big things grow | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:17 | 21 |
| re .9 Thanks.
Now for another question:
I received my prospectus from 20th Century and I like what they have to
offer.
I have also had a hard sell by Priamerican for the Common Sense Fund
which has a 8.5% Load (very high)
What is the formula for calculating what you will have say after 20
years assuming a 15% growth per year and adding $200 per month to the
fund. I would like to determine the difference between giving up 8.5%
up front for Common Sense and paying 1% on the earning (20th Century)
but still earning on 100% of the money payed into the fund each month.
I do believe I will be buying into the 20th Century Vista fund though.
Thanks
Steve
|
90.11 | Well, 20th Century said so! | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Mon Aug 24 1992 14:17 | 15 |
| re: .9
Are you SURE???
I have always understood that the % management fee is charged against
your TOTAL ASSET VALUE, NOT the gains. Just to make sure I was think
straight, I called 20th Century. The rep. I spoke to have confirmed my
original understanding - it IS 1% of your TOTAL account ASSET value.
Imagine, if the 1% is only on "gains" and the fund does not make any
gains in a year (such as this year). How is the fund going to pay for
its expenses and how the fund managers get paid?
Mike
|
90.12 | | ASIC::ASIC::KANDAPPAN | | Fri Aug 28 1992 16:03 | 9 |
| Yes, my understanding is that the management fees of 1% is off the total
assets in the fund; will check tomight though.
I'd be surprised and mighty pleased if the company tied their fees to their
performance. But then, I'd be mighty suspect of the sanity of any company
that tied its fees to the gains, particularly for such highly volatile funds
as 20th Ultra & Giftrust!
-parthi
|
90.13 | Vote NO on 5 | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Tue Jun 15 1993 14:10 | 13 |
| I noticed last night in my 20th Century semi-annual report, with
ballot, that Growth has purchased DEC stock under its computer group.
Growth is also doing very poorly....
As for the ballot, I disapproved the desire to change voting from
share based to dollar based voting. It won't count for much, but it'll
count less if the voting right is changed.
And since I was in a rebellious mood, I also withheld nomination for
James Stowers III, 34 yro son and now President of the Investment firm
as announced by Dad in the ballot info. Dad is off fishing I suppose.
Bob
|
90.14 | GROWTH? Buy, sell or hold? | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Thu Dec 02 1993 11:45 | 9 |
|
Is anyone else out there still hanging in with 20th Century's
GROWTH fund? It's been a dog (DEC stock may be part of that).
ULTRA has done well but I'm not sure about keeping GROWTH much longer.
Anyone have an advice one way or the other?
Bob
|
90.15 | IntEq doing OK too | CSC32::J_MORTON | O8-OO-2b || ! 2b | Mon Dec 06 1993 13:58 | 6 |
| In addition to ULTRA, their International Equity fund has been doing
fairly well, too.
fyi,
/jimm
|
90.16 | Been there, done that. | KYOSS1::HANSON | Just doin' what makes sense. | Thu Dec 09 1993 12:46 | 9 |
|
I moved from Vista to Ultra a couple of weeks ago, since Vista was also
underperforming. I immediately saw Ultra take a bit of a nosedive, but
it's on its way back up now.
I figure that the fund is just accustomed to some rather wild swings.
Bob
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90.17 | For those of you who like roller coasters . . . | WREATH::FRANZOSA | | Thu Dec 09 1993 14:30 | 5 |
| 20th Century Vista and Ultra are both fairly volatile funds. Vista has been hampered
in the last year because they invest substantially in health care. That should settle
down once people get comfortable with the idea of change in health care management.
Regardless, 20th Century funds generally have enjoyed a reputation for being well-managed
and affordable to small investors and that's really what you're betting on.
|