London-based portfolio manager Barnaby Wiener is having a terrific year.
His international fund is down 10 percent.
Maybe that doesn't sound so great to you, but his results exceed nine out of 10 foreign large-cap value funds in 2008. Many of those funds, once considered bastions of opportunity whenever the U.S. market exhibited weakness, have really tanked.
"The key to our fund's relatively better performance is being defensive, with underexposure in financials and overexposure in health care," said Wiener, manager of the $1.1 billion MFS International Value Fund (MGIAX). "Our big challenge at the moment is figuring into which beaten-up areas we should be increasing our exposure."
Taking a broader look at Wiener's fund besides this difficult year, it has a three-year annualized return of 9 percent and five-year annualized return of 16 percent.
Investors must decide whether to keep money in international funds even though they've been heartbreakers this year. Then they should determine whether there are attractive bargains among the ruins, since logic and history dictate that world markets can't stay down forever.
A notable example of an unduly punished foreign stock is French electrical equipment manufacturer Legrand (LR on the Paris Exchange), Wiener said. While the company's exposure to the out-of-favor construction industry has been emphasized, its revenues, margins and pricing power remain remarkably strong, he said.
Another example, the $667 million Quant Foreign Value Fund (QFVOX), is a foreign large-cap value fund that, despite its 22 percent nosedive this year, has a bright future that makes it a bargain, according to Morningstar Inc.
For years that fund successfully employed a quantitative model to rank 24,000 stocks around the world, but it recently stumbled due to a low energy stake and big declines by British homebuilders. This "no-load" (no sales charge) fund requires a $2,500 minimum investment.
"A lot of the meltdown this year has been an overreaction," said Jeff Tjornehoj, senior research analyst with Lipper Inc. in Denver. "You couldn't lose on international funds a couple of years ago, and now we're having to pay some of that back."
The global declines are across the board, with, for example, China region funds down 31 percent this year and European funds down 19 percent, according to Lipper. Latin American funds almost seem like winners with their 10 percent decline.
"There will be no lasting damage," predicted Ron Rowland, editor of the All Star Investor newsletter in Austin, Texas. "The trend toward larger allocations in international stocks for U.S. investors will be with us for many more decades."