T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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277.1 | I like Janus Twenty! | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Wed Sep 16 1992 15:11 | 10 |
| I don't know about the India Fund. But the Janus Tewnty Fund invests in
20 - 25 different stocks (therefore the name). It is a very good fund
and has been recommended by Money and some other financial publicatons.
However, due to its limited holdings, it is rather volatile. Not the
kind of "moderate risk" you are talking about. But, in a long run, I
think it is a very good fund and it will do very well. The Janus Group
of Funds require $1000 minimum initial investment. So, I think you just
barely made it with that $1K.
Mike
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277.2 | More on India Growth Fund | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Wed Sep 16 1992 16:22 | 22 |
| Re. .0
Note that IGF is closed for new money. It is traded however, at a
discount, on NYSE (Symbol = IGF).
It was traded at 26 a few months ago when the Indian stock market
was *booming*. However, with a huge securities scandal, involving
the most prominent bull players and highly placed banking and govt.
officials, the market took a beating: IGF fell to around 15 in
June or July.
It has since bounced back to 19, mostly because the Indian economy is
growing reasonably well. In spite of all these scandals, the Bombay
Stock Exchange was up around 100% for the last year!
I wouldn't recommend that you put your 1000$ in IGF, if this is your
first or only investment. But if you already have money in safer
places, I would recommend IGF on its holdings (they have some of the
bluest chip stocks in India). I don't know about the price though.
FWIW, I don't have any money in IGF, but my family in India continues
to hold many of its underlying stocks.
|
277.3 | If not India, here's another English-speaking country | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Wed Sep 16 1992 21:23 | 9 |
| United Kingdom Fund, UKM, a closed-end mutual fund. 10% discount.
Today the FTSE-100 was down 70 points but managed to recover *all* of
it by the close. A market that can withstand that kind of beating in
the face of currency woes is a market destined to move higher.
But, wait until next week, just in case...
John
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277.4 | What about a Japan fund? | CAMONE::ZIOMEK | Pump up the TEST | Thu Sep 17 1992 13:05 | 9 |
|
What about a Japan fund? The Scudder Japan fund is up about 13%
over the last 6 weeks or so. With the Nikkei still at depressed levels
since the late 80's it has a lot of room to grow upwards!
Just my 2�
John
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277.5 | More research follows... | BROKE::RAM | Reagan Republican for Clinton/GORE! | Thu Sep 17 1992 14:35 | 68 |
|
Good suggestions, keep 'em coming! It's nice to toss ideas and
share information like this.
Re .1 -- Amitabh
This is not my first or only investment. I have had an IRA with
Mutual Shares since 1989. I chose it because it had been recommended
by two "independent" authorities -- Business Week, which gave it three
up-arrows (the best), and Andrew Tobias of Managing Your Money fame.
It's 5-year yield is about 11.5%, so it's not been too bad; though
it did have one down year (1990, 10.1%). Last year it grew 21%,
and this year its up 11.5%. It's fund manager, Michael Price is
a strong proponent of "value investing".
By the way, do you have the phone number for India Growth Fund handy ?
I haven't been able to find it any place it's referenced so far.
Re .4 -- John
Has Japan bottomed out ? The conventional wisdom has it that may still
have some more to go. I will investigate this some more. Also there
is a fund called the "Japan Fund", which I suppose is different from
the Scudder Japan Fund ?
============
Continuing with my research:
Robertson Stephenson Emerging Growth Fund - no load -- assets
of $205 million. 1991 return: 58.5%, this year down 17%. Fund has
been averaging 25% a year since its inception about 5 years ago.
Analyst in Money magazine says 20% growth is possible in the next
5 years. Its yearly expense ratio is around 1.51. Rated 5 stars
by Morningstar (the highest).
So what's the catch ?
Minimum - $5000 -- out of my range. For IRA, the min is $1000 and
there is a $10 fee. I have to pay a $9 fee for Mutual Shares, so
it may not be worth paying $10 to get into another growth fund.
=========
Vanguard Wellesly - no load. Minimum $3000, $500 for an IRA. This
fund has delivered solid performance in the 11 to 16% range in the
last 1 to 10 years. This is an income fund, so I would be diverifying
my portfolio a bit. The expense ratio is 0.51%. Strongly recommended
by Kenneth Hooker in last week's Sunday Globe. Anyone has an opinion
on Mr Hooker ?
========
Financial Industrial Income - no load. Min is $250. Rated 2 up-arrows
by Business Week in 1990. Also recommended by Kenneth Hooker in last
week's Sunday Globe. Since the beginning of this year, this fund has
lost 5%. Its 1-year return for the year ending Aug 31 is 4.43%, its
3-year and 5-year yield have been 42.51% and 73.52%, and it's been
averaging 18.06% since its inception. Its expense ratio is 0.78.
========
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277.7 | Buy it thru' a stock broker | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Thu Sep 17 1992 18:24 | 13 |
| Re. .5
> By the way, do you have the phone number for India Growth Fund handy ?
As I wrote before, IGF is closed for new investments. You can however
buy into it by purchasing it thru' your stock broker. Note that for
$1000, you will only get about 50 shares of IGF, not a round lot of
100: your commissions will eat into the discount you are getting now.
BTW, for the performance rating and other fund info, including its
holdings and the fund address, you can look up the Morningstar
Report (probably your public library carries it). I had some old
info (June 91) that I just threw away last week :-(.
|
277.8 | | BRAT::WELLS | Cakes useless if you can't eat it too! | Fri Sep 18 1992 15:54 | 10 |
|
The Janus Twenty funds minimum of $1000 can be circumvented by
having monthly withdrawals of $50 to the account. I am currently
using this fund and some of Twentieth Centuries funds for my
relatively small amounts of mutual fund investing. 20th Cent is
another no-load with no minimum balance with monthly deposits that
has some good track-record funds.
Tim
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277.9 | BULLISH ON AMERICA | ODIXIE::GELINEAU | | Sat Sep 19 1992 18:37 | 32 |
|
I like Janus particularly since it has digested some of last years
gains. If I was looking to take an additional position at this time
Janus would rank high on the list. It is one of the mutuals I follow
for selective market sentiment. Get a current prospectus to see what
Janus' current stock holdings.
I do not like Japan right now. I feel kinda like it will go through
the George Bush bounce which means the lows need to be tested before
larger gains ahead. I would look at Europe for diversification with
a 12 to 18 month horizon.
Personally I am not looking to Europe. I
think there are a lot of good opportunities right here at home.
One of those opportunities could be 20th Century Growth. One of my
all time favorites! Also, how about some stock in Chysler. I would
consider that to be a conservative bet on a revival of American
industrial strength.
I may be the next one to receive TFSO, hopefully not, but I am bullish
on America. I do not like the prospect of Bill Clinton taxes, but the
way I see it things will begin to turn around once the elections are
over and the media stops selling us on how bad off we are. Low
interest, low industrial overhead, low inflation adds up to big
potential for mid 93 and out.
A student I am -- an expert I am not!
Rgds,
JG
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277.10 | Robertson Stephenson | BOOVX1::GLOSTER | | Wed Jan 27 1993 22:07 | 7 |
|
Any numbers for Robertson Stephenson Growth ????
Sounds interesting...
Thank's
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277.11 | Robertson Stephens Emerging Growth | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Thu Jan 28 1993 09:09 | 8 |
| I have my IRA there. They have been around since 1987. The Morningstar rating
is 4 stars. They have a 5 year annualized return of 22.79%, and a 3 year of
19.22%, They had a bad year last year losing 2.87% (but up from the pre-October
number of -19.83%). The fund is a manageable size of 197.5 million (something
I weigh heavily). They invest primarily in small company growth stocks, and
are favored by a few publications for the 90's.
michael
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277.12 | | SUBWAY::SAMBAMURTY | Raja | Thu Feb 04 1993 15:57 | 1 |
| I believe that they require a minimum of $5k to get started..
|
277.13 | Mutual Discovery Fund | BROKE::RAM | | Thu Feb 04 1993 20:36 | 25 |
|
Mutual Series, which runs the Mutual Shares, Mutual Qualified and
Mutual Beacon funds has added a fourth called Mutual Discovery whose
sole im is long-term capital appreciation. It will invest a portion of
its assets in small-cap stocks and non-US securities, but has the
flexibility to invest in any type of security, including debt
securities.
The Fund's manager is Michael Price who oversees the other 3 funds as
well. It is no-load with a minimum investment of $1,000 and and
expense ratio of 1.50 (rather high in my opinion). The assets of
the fund total $50 million. The Fund was open (to the public, at
any rate) on Jan 1, and the share price has shot up from $10.00
to $10.76.
Michael Price is well-known as a "value-investing" guru, and
consulted even by the likes of Peter Lynch. His funds had a
bad year in 1990, but had a nice come-back in the last couple
of years; especially last year they did 23% or so, well above
the market average. Two of the funds (Mutual Shares and Mutual
Qualified) are closed to new investors.
Any thoughts on this ? Especially on the "value-investing"
style, is it appropriate now, and oh yes, how are we from
the market peak.
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