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5 Aggressive Growth Mutual Funds To Buy For High Growth

When capital appreciation over the long term takes precedence over dividend payouts, growth funds become a natural choice for investors. However, investors looking for highest capital gains should look no further than investing in aggressive growth mutual funds. These funds invest in companies that show high growth prospects, but that comes with the risk of share price fluctuations. This category of funds also invests heavily in undervalued stocks, IPOs and relatively volatile securities in order to profit from them in a congenial economic climate. Securities are selected on the basis of their issuing company’s potential for growth and profitability. Below we will share with you 5 buy-rated Aggressive Growth mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) or Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy) as we expect these mutual funds to outperform their peers in the future. Hartford Growth Opportunities Fund A (MUTF: HGOAX ) invests in a broad range of common stocks from diversified industries and companies that the sub-adviser considers to have superior growth prospects. HGOAX focuses on mid to large cap stocks and a maximum of 25% may be invested in non-US issuers and non-dollar securities. HGOAX has a three-year annualized return of 21.6%. Hartford Growth Opportunities A has an expense ratio of 1.15% compared to a category average of 1.19%. Fidelity Growth Strategies (MUTF: FDEGX ) seeks capital appreciation. FDEGX invests primarily in common stocks of domestic and foreign issuers that the management believes offer potential for accelerated earnings or revenue growth. FDEGX focuses on investments in medium-sized companies, but it may also invest substantially in larger or smaller companies. FDEGX has a three-year annualized return of 21.1%. As of May 2015, FDEGX held 123 issues, with 2.41% of its total assets invested in Avago Technologies (NASDAQ: AVGO ) PrimeCap Odyssey Aggressive Growth (MUTF: POAGX ) invests in U.S. companies having rapid earnings growth potential. Though POAGX invests across market sectors and market caps, it has historically invested most of its assets in mid to small cap firms. This high yield mutual fund has a three-year annualized return of 8.7%. POAGX has a three-year annualized return of 25.3%. Theo A. Kolokotrones is the fund manager and has managed this fund since 2004. Vantagepoint Aggressive Opportunities Fund (MUTF: VPAOX ) seeks capital growth over the long term. It invests using an actively managed strategy in stocks of small to mid cap domestic and foreign firms, which are believed to have high capital growth prospects. The fund also invests in stocks listed in a custom version of the Russell Midcap Growth Index. VPAOX has a three-year annualized return of 25.3%. Vantagepoint Aggressive Opportunities Investor has an expense ratio of 0.83% compared to a category average of 1.30%. ClearBridge Aggressive Growth Fund A (MUTF: SHRAX ) seek capital appreciation. SHRAX invests in companies that the manager believes are growing or will improve earnings at a faster rate than companies included in the S&P 500 Index. SHRAX invests a significant portion of its assets in small and medium-sized companies. SHRAX has a three-year annualized return of 21.9%. As of June 2015, SHRAX held 71 issues, with 9.3% of its total assets invested in Biogen Inc. (NASDAQ: BIIB ) Original Post

3 ETFs To Add To Your Celebrations On July Fourth

As one of the busiest travel holidays, this Fourth of July promises big business as pockets are heavier and confidence is on the rise. While the strength in the U.S. economy has translated into rising income, cheaper fuel has led to increased savings for long weekend getaways. This is especially true as gasoline price has been on the downtrend over the past couple of weeks. As per the AAA, drivers paid an average of $2.77 per gallon as of July 1, which is below 91 cents per gallon from the year-ago price and the lowest on this date since 2010. This trend is likely to continue over the Independence Day weekend and July 4 gas price will likely be the lowest in at least five years, spurring travelling demand. AAA estimates that 41.9 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more during the holiday weekend (July 1 to July 5) with 85% (35.5 million) choosing to travel by car. This represents maximum travelling since 2007. But the celebration is incomplete without fireworks, barbecues and of course shopping. In fact, Independence Day marks the beginning of the busiest half of the year for retailers. Many retailers are already flashing exciting deals for July Fourth and massive discounts are in the cards for a specific day. Among the most notable, Best Buy (NYSE: BBY ) is offering up to 40% discount on major appliances, including refrigerators, ranges and dishwashers while the departmental store Macy’s (NYSE: M ) is offering the “lowest prices of the season” on indoor and outdoor furniture, and mattresses on Independence Day. The online e-commerce behemoth Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) will celebrate with limited-time price cuts on movies, books, music and more. About 23% of consumers would hit the stores in search of decorative items, apparels, and groceries. Spending per household is estimated at $71.23, up from $68.16 last year, according to the National Retail Federation (NYSE: NRF ). Further, Americans are expected to spend $6.6 billion on food alone. That being said, this holiday will be a celebration of not only freedom, but also economic growth. Along with the spirit of the Americans, this July Fourth weekend should lift revenues and profits in various corners. Industries like transportation, lodging, hotel, restaurants, food and retail will benefit the most. Investors seeking to tap the July Fourth fanfare could ride on these industries through the following ETFs: iShares Dow Jones Transportation Average ETF (NYSEARCA: IYT ) The ETF provides exposure to the broad transportation sector by tracking the Dow Jones Transportation Average Index. The fund holds a small basket of 20 stocks with heavy concentration and dominance in the top 10 holdings. Railroad takes the top spot at 46.3% while airfreight & logistics and airlines round off to the next two spots with double-digit allocation each. The fund has accumulated $841 million in its asset base while it sees good trading volume of around 442,000 shares a day. It charges 43 bps in fees and expenses and has a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating with a High risk outlook. SPDR S&P Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) This product tracks the S&P Retail Select Industry Index, holding 104 securities in its basket. It is widely spread across each component as none of these hold more than 1.15% of total assets. In terms of sector holdings, about one-fourth of the portfolio is allotted to apparel retail while specialty stores, Internet retail and automotive retail also receive double-digit allocation each. XRT is the most popular and actively traded ETF in the retail space with AUM of about $1.1 billion and average daily volume of about 2.1 million shares. It charges 35 bps in annual fees and has a Zacks ETF Rank of 1 or ‘Strong Buy’ rating with a Medium risk outlook. PowerShares Dynamic Leisure and Entertainment Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PEJ ) This fund tracks the Dynamic Leisure and Entertainment Intellidex Index and holds a small basket of 30 US leisure and entertainment companies. The product is pretty well spread out across various securities as none accounts for more than 5.14% of total assets. From an industrial look, the fund is heavy on airlines and restaurants that collectively make up for 58% share, closely followed by hotels & leisure facilities (20%). The ETF has amassed $181.2 million in its asset base and trades in light volume of 49,000 shares a day on average. Expense ratio came in at 0.63%. PEJ has a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 with a Medium risk outlook. Original Post

16 Implications Of ‘The Phases Of An Investment Idea’

Registered investment advisor, bonds, dividend investing, ETF investing “}); $$(‘#article_top_info .info_content div’)[0].insert({bottom: $(‘mover’)}); } $(‘article_top_info’).addClassName(test_version); } SeekingAlpha.Initializer.onDOMLoad(function(){ setEvents();}); My last post has many implications. I want to make them clear in this post. When you analyze a manager, look at the repeatability of his processes. It’s possible that you could get “the Big Short” right once and never have another good investment idea in your life. Same for investors who are the clever ones who picked the most recent top or bottom… they are probably one-trick ponies. When a manager does well and begins to pick up a lot of new client assets, watch for the period where the growth slows to almost zero. It is quite possible that some of the great performance during the high-growth period stemmed from asset prices rising due to the purchases of the manager himself. It might be a good time to exit, or for shorts to consider the assets with the highest percentage of market cap owned as targets for shorting. Often when countries open up to foreign investment, valuations are relatively low. The initial flood of money often pushes up valuations, leads to momentum buyers, and a still greater flow of money. Eventually, an adjustment comes and shakes out the undisciplined investors. But when you look at the return series to analyze potential future investment, ignore the early years – they aren’t representative of the future. Before an academic paper showing a way to invest that would been clever to use in the past gets published, the excess returns are typically described as coming from valuation, momentum, manager skill, etc. After the paper is published, money starts getting applied to the idea, and the strategy will do well initially. Again, too much money can get applied to a limited factor (or other) anomaly, because no one knows how far it can get pushed before the market rebels. Be careful when you apply the research – if you are late, you could get to hold the bag of overvalued companies. Aside for that, don’t assume that performance from the academic paper’s era or the 2-3 years after that will persist. Those are almost always the best years for a factor (or other) anomaly strategy. During a credit boom, almost every new type of fixed-income security, dodgy or not, will look like genius by the early purchasers. During a credit bust, it is rare for a new security type to fare well. Anytime you take a large position in an obscure security, it must jump through extra hoops to assure a margin of safety. Don’t assume that merely because you are off the beaten path that you are a clever contrarian, smarter than most. Always think about the carrying capacity of a strategy when you look at an academic paper. It might be clever, but it might not be able to handle a lot of money. Examples would include trying to do exactly what Ben Graham did in the early days today, and things like Piotroski’s methods, because typically, only a few small and obscure stocks survive the screen. Also look at how an academic paper models trading and liquidity, if they give it any real thought at all. Many papers embed the idea that liquidity is free, and that large trades can happen where prices closed previously. Hedge funds and other manager databases should reflect that some managers have closed their funds, and put them in a separate category, because new money can’t be applied to those funds. That is to say, there should be “new money allowed” indexes. Max Heine, who started the Mutual Series funds (now part of Franklin), was a genius when he thought of the strategy 20% distressed investing, 20% arbitrage/event-driven investing and 60% value investing. It produced great returns in 9 years out of 10. But once distressed investing and event-driven because heavily done, the idea lost its punch. Michael Price was clever enough to sell the firm to Franklin before that was realized, and thus, capitalizing the past track record that would not do as well in the future. The same applies to a lot of clever managers. They have a very good sense of when their edge is getting dulled by too much competition and where the future will not be as good as the past. If they have the opportunity to sell, they will disproportionately do so then. Corporate management teams are like rock bands. Most of them never have a hit song. (For managements, a period where a strategy improves profitability far more than most would have expected.) The next-most are one-hit wonders. Few have multiple hits, and rare are those that create a culture of hits. Applying this to management teams – the problem is if they get multiple bright ideas or a culture of success, it is often too late to invest, because the valuation multiple adjusts to reflect it. Thus, advantages accrue to those who can spot clever managements before the rest of the market. More often this happens in dull industries, because no one would think to look there. It probably doesn’t make sense to run from hot investment idea to hot investment idea as a result of all of this. You will end up getting there once the period of genius is over and valuations have adjusted. It might be better to buy the burned-out stuff and see if a positive surprise might come. (Watch margin of safety…) Macroeconomics and the effect that it has on investment returns is overanalyzed, though many get the effects wrong anyway. Also, when central bankers and politicians take cues from the prices of risky assets, the feedback loop confuses matters considerably. if you must pay attention to macro in investing, always ask, “Is it priced in or not? How much of it is priced in?” Most asset allocation work that relies on past returns is easy to do and bogus. Good asset allocation is forward-looking and ignores past returns. Finally, remember that some ideas seem right by accident – they aren’t actually right. Many academic papers don’t get published. Many different methods of investing get tried. Many managements try new business ideas. Those that succeed get air time, whether it was due to intelligence or luck. Use your business sense to analyze which it might be, or if it is a combination. There’s more that could be said here. Just be cautious with new investment strategies, whatever form they may take. Make sure that you maintain a margin of safety; you will likely need it. Disclosure: None. 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