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Monday, July 06, 2009
Selena Maranjian :: Townhall.com Columnist
Fewer Stocks Can Mean Higher Returns
by Selena Maranjian
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We all know that diversification can help you protect your portfolio from volatility. But if you want to maximize your returns, you have to be willing to invest with conviction.

One proponent of this philosophy is renowned investor Phil Fisher, who wrote one of the investing world's most respected books, Common Stocks, Uncommon Profits. He also popularized the concept of "scuttlebutt," whereby an investor digs for the inside story on a company by talking with employees, customers, suppliers, and others who have unique views on businesses.

With respect to diversification, he said, "I don't want a lot of good investments; I want a few outstanding ones." Many great investors, such as Warren Buffett, have echoed this. Think about it -- given the market's long-term average annual gain of around 10%, if good investments average, say, 11%, and great ones average 14%, lots of good ones would give you much less growth than a few great ones.

This premise should lead us to consider focusing, or concentrating, our portfolios on just our best ideas. That can mean aiming to own shares of just the 10 or 12 most attractive stocks we find.

It can also mean investing in mutual funds whose managers choose to concentrate the assets in their care among a few dozen stocks, instead of the several hundred you'll see in many funds. The Fidelity Magellan (FMAGX) fund, for example, recently held more than 200 different stocks. Even when a fund manager hits a home run on one stock, it won't make much difference when their performance is diluted by hundreds of less spectacular performances. These days, many large-cap-focused mutual funds have begun to resemble S&P 500 index funds. They're called "closet" index funds, and they don't serve their shareholders very well, since those shareholders could get a similar performance from an actual index fund with much lower fees.

Survey says …
That much is simple common sense, but it's also backed up by some research. A 2003 report from the Michigan Business School, for example, looked at stock funds from 1984 to 1999 and found that funds with an above-median degree of industry concentration exceeded average returns by about 0.82 percentage points annually after expenses, while funds with a below-median level of concentration finished with returns 0.73 percentage points below the average. That's a pretty big difference. The researchers extended their research later and found that the concentration edge persisted.

Playing concentration …
If you want to look into concentrated (or "focused") funds, below are some with rather respectable results, relative to the overall market:

Fund

# of Stocks Held

5-Year Avg. Annual Return

Recent Key Holdings

Fairholme (FAIRX)

21

6.8%

Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Boeing , General Dynamics (NYSE: GD)

FMI Large Cap (FMIHX)

27

2.2%

United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS), Automatic Data Processing (Nasdaq: ADP), BP (NYSE: BP) Continued...

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About The Author

Selena Maranjian prepares the Fool's syndicated newspaper column, writes articles for Fool.com, has coordinated the Fool's annual Foolanthropy charity drive, and has written a number of Fool books, among other things.

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