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Best Mutual Fund Investing Strategy |
August 27, 2008 By Dan Wiener, Editor, Independent Adviser for Vanguard Investors |


Dan Wiener
Daniel P. Wiener is America's leading expert on investing in Vanguard mutual funds and is editor of The Independent Adviser for Vanguard Investors, a monthly newsletter that keeps abreast of recent developments at Vanguard. The Adviser is a five-time winner of the Newsletter Publishers Foundation's Editorial Excellence Award.
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Now, some investment pundits think buying a year’s worst fund is a good contrarian strategy. Don’t bet on it. I looked at how this would play out at Vanguard and, without mincing words, it’s an awful idea. Since 1981, the strategy would have netted the “dog-buying” contrarian investor a return that was less than one half that of the overall market.
On an compounded, annualized basis, that’s 19.7% for Hot Hands versus 12.6% for Total Stock Market, and just 9.0% for the “dog” fund, contrarian strategy.
Over 24 rolling three-year periods, the Hot Hands strategy returned an average 20.2% annualized return compared with a 12.8% return for Total Stock Market. The worst three-year period was a gain of 6.6% for Hot Hands versus a 14.3% loss for the index. In fact, the worst single year for the Vanguard Hot Hands investor was 2002, when Selected Value (VASVX) lost 9.8%, which was less than half the market’s decline. This is particularly encouraging, since the one thing you worry about when pursuing a mechanical strategy like this one is whether you will ever suffer tremendous losses.
Even better, the Hot Hands strategy has a 100% record of beating the index over 10- and five-year periods, and beats the index 88% of the time over rolling three-year periods.
But note that I didn't say that this strategy beats the market every year. It missed by 0.3% in 2007, and it has missed in other years as well. It's not a lock on doubling your money. And I’ve never advocated that you sink your entire stash into any Hot Hands fund. That would fly in the face of the diversified investment approach that I preach to all investors. But I believe growth-oriented investors can improve their total portfolio’s performance by making sure that a portion of their money is following the Hot Hands strategy.
It’s also worth noting that this strategy doesn’t work for all fund families or for all funds, though my colleague Jim Lowell, editor of Fidelity Investor, has found the same pattern among that fund family’s offerings. But for the fund families it does work for, this strategy soars like an eagle, while others drop like turkeys.
Dan Wiener names the names of the Hot Hands funds, in his monthly newsletter, The Independent Adviser for Vanguard Investors, where he helps his subscribers make more than 144% more than the average Vanguard investor. And with his risk-free money-back guarantee, you have nothing to lose, but a ton to gain. Get started today!
