Young Research & Publishing Inc.

Investment Research Since 1978

Disclosure

  • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Archives
    • Dick Young’s Safe America
    • The Final Richard C. Young’s Intelligence Report
    • You’ve Read The Last Issue of Intelligence Report, Now What?
    • Dick Young’s Research Key: Anecdotal Evidence Gathering
    • Crisis at Vanguard
  • Investment Analysis
    • Bonds
    • Currencies and Gold
    • Dividend Investing
    • ETFs & Funds
    • Investment Strategy
    • Retirement Investing
    • Stocks
    • The Efficient Frontier
  • Investment Counsel
  • Dynamic Maximizers®
  • Retirement Compounders®
  • Free Email Signup

An Investment Strategy Guaranteed to Win

November 10, 2010 By Dick Young

In investing there is only one variable that an investor can control, and that is cost. Cost is vital to your long-term investment success. Lower costs necessarily result in higher returns. There is no disputing this fact. As an example, take two funds with the same gross return, Fund A and Fund B. Fund A has a 1% expense ratio and Fund B has a 2% expense ratio. After fees are deducted, Fund A will return 1% more than Fund B. Anybody capable of basic arithmetic should be able to figure this out. Yet, millions haven’t. The mutual fund industry is jam-packed with high-expense-ratio-load funds and those with 12b-1 marketing fees.

Morningstar, the fund data company most famous for its fund star ratings system, released a study this week on the predictive ability of expense ratios. Morningstar compared compound annual returns for five different categories of funds over five different time periods ending in March of 2010. The fund company split each mutual fund category into quintiles based on expense ratio and compared the returns on those quintiles. As Morningstar puts it, “Expense ratios are strong predictors of performance. In every asset class over every time period the cheapest quintile produced higher returns than the most expensive quintile.” For the domestic equity category, the lowest-cost funds on average performed 1.38% better per year.

The first item I look at when I’m evaluating a fund is cost. If a fund has a load or a 12b-1 fee, I won’t even consider it, nor should you. I don’t care what the fund invests in or how good a track record it boasts. When I buy mutual funds for myself, my family, and my clients, I buy only no-load, no-12b-1-fee, low-expense-ratio funds, and I advise the same strategy for you. It’s a guaranteed winner.

Share this:

  • Email
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

You Might Also Like:

  • Income Investing: The Nightmare is Ending
  • FOMO a Dangerous Investment Strategy
  • Steam Rolled
  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Dick Young
Richard C. Young is the editor of Young's World Money Forecast, and a contributing editor to both Richardcyoung.com and Youngresearch.com.
Latest posts by Dick Young (see all)
  • PRICES SOAR: Diesel Shortage Could Cripple America’s Economy - May 13, 2022
  • Young’s Retirement Compounders Clearly Dominate! - April 26, 2022
  • The Magic of Compound Interest - April 5, 2022

Search Young Research

Most Popular

  • Will the Fed Stick to Its Course?
  • RECESSION? Dow 25,000, $8 Gas, Rising Interest Rates, Spell Mid-term Crack Up
  • Investing During a Recession
  • Swiss National Bank Surprises World with Rate Hike
  • Kellogg Cuts Loose with Split Plan
  • The Power of a Compound Interest Table
  • MONEY TALKS: The Best Service in Paris
  • Predictions of MEGA-SPENDING on Metaverse
  • Apple Shares Resilient in the Face of Recession
  • Vanguard Wellesley (VWINX) vs. Wellington (VWELX): Which Fund is Best?

Don’t Miss

Default Risk Among the Many Concerns with Annuities

Risk and Reward: An Efficient Frontier

How to be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth

Could this Be the Vanguard GNMA Winning Edge?

Cryptocosm and Life After Google

Warning: Avoid Mutual Fund Year End Distributions

Is Gold a Good Long-term Investment?

How to Invest in Gold

Vanguard Wellington (VWELX): The Original Balanced Fund

What is the Best Gold ETF for Investing and Trading?

Procter & Gamble (PG) Stock: The Only True Dividend King

The Dividend King of the North

You’ll Love This if You’re Dreaming of an Active Retirement Life

RSS The Latest at Richardcyoung.com

  • Greetings From Paris & Le Bristol Hotel
  • The Most Controversial Restaurant in Paris?
  • Your Survival Guy: Clearing the Decks, Buying a Boat, Seeing the World and More
  • Russia’s “Unsubtle” Artillery Attacks Not Necessarily “Archaic”
  • FLORIDA DODGED A BULLET: Elected Superb DeSantis Over Unstable Gillum
  • Biden, a Job Killing Machine
  • Good News for the 2nd Amendment
  • La Fontaine De Mars: Best Sunday Paris Lunch
  • My 10 Favorite Books about France, Plus a Bonus for You
  • BREAKING: Supreme Court DISMANTLES New York’s Unconstitutional Gun Laws

About Us

  • About Young Research
  • Archives
  • Contributors

Our Partners

  • Richard C. Young & Co.
  • Richardcyoung.com

Copyright © 2022 | Terms & Conditions

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.