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Morningstar Ratings Of Target Date Funds Are Obsolete

Asset allocation is the primary determinant of investment performance and risk. Many say asset allocation explains more than 90% of investment results, but the fact is that it explains more than 100% . Because of this importance, we provide a detailed examination of target date fund glide paths in order to differentiate the good from the bad. Our focus is on fiduciary responsibility and the characteristics of a glide path that make it Prudent. Prudent glide paths are good. Imprudent glide paths are not good for both beneficiaries and fiduciaries. Fiduciaries face possible legal action for imprudent TDF selections. A glide path does not have to produce high returns to be Prudent. In fact, high returns can be an indication of imprudent risk taking. We use the PIMCO Glide Path Analyzer in the following to examine TDF Prudence and to develop Prudence Ratings that differ from Morningstar Ratings. Morningstar Ratings tend to penalize Prudence. Click to enlarge Defining Prudence The three great benefits of target date funds are diversification and risk control provided at a reasonable cost. All three of these benefits vary widely across target date fund providers, as shown on the right of the above graph. Looking to the left of the graph at long terms to target date, we see consensus in high equity allocation – the lines cluster. The differentiator at long dates is diversification. Theory states, and evidence confirms, that diversification improves the risk-reward profile of a portfolio. Greater diversification leads to higher returns per unit of risk, and is a benefit of TDFs. Looking to the right of the graph, near the target date, we see wide disagreement, with equity allocations at target date ranging from a high of 70% to a low of 20%. The prudent choice is safety at the target date, the other benefit of TDFs. These two key benefits, plus fees, are discussed in the following in the order of their importance. The most important benefit is safety at the target date Safety at the target date is the most important benefit for the following reasons: There is no fiduciary upside to taking risk at the target date. Only downside. The next 2008 will bring class action lawsuits. There is a “risk zone” spanning the 5 years preceding and following retirement during which lifestyles are at stake. Account balances are at their highest and a participant’s ability to work longer and/or save more is limited. You only get to do this once; no do-overs. Most participants withdraw their accounts at the target date, so “target death” (i.e., “Through”) funds are absurd, and built for profit. All TDFs are de facto “To” funds. Save and protect. The best individual course of action is to save enough and avoid capital losses. Employers should educate employees about the importance of saving, and report on saving adequacy. Prior to the Pension Protection Act of 2006, default investments were cash. Has the Act changed the risk appetite of those nearing retirement? Surveys say no. Click to enlarge As you can see in the following graph from PIMCO’s Glide Path Analyzer, only a handful of TDFs provide true safety at the target date. The second most important benefit is reasonable cost Fees undermine investment performance and are the basis for several successful lawsuits. You can be the judge of what is reasonable, keeping in mind that you want to get what you pay for. The challenge for plan providers is achieving good diversification for a reasonable cost. Assets that diversify, like commodities and real estate, are expensive. As shown in the following graph, only a handful of TDFs are low cost, similar to the scarcity of TDFs that provide safety at the target date. You need to ask yourself what you get for a high fee that you can’t get for a much lower fee. Fees Click to enlarge Diversification is the third most important benefit ” A picture is worth a thousand words.” Diversification is readily visualized as the number of distinct asset classes in the glide path, especially at long dates. The following are examples of well diversified TDFs, as seen through the lens of PIMCO’s Glide Path Analyzer. Keep these images in mind when you view the other glide paths shown in the next section. Think “A rainbow of colors is diversified.” Click to enlarge Common Practices Most assets in target date funds are invested with the Big 3 bundled service providers and with funds that have high Morningstar ratings. Here are the glide paths for these common practices. Click to enlarge Fidelity is the most diversified of this group, as indicated by the color spectrum at long dates (40 years). All three end at the target date with more than 50% in risky assets, which is not safe. As shown in the risk graph above, the Big 3 are low on the list of safety at the target date. Click to enlarge High Morningstar ratings go to funds with a high concentration in US stocks because US stocks have performed very well in the past 5 years. High Performance is not the same as Prudence. In fact, it’s currently an indication of imprudent risk concentrated in US stocks. Putting it all together: Prudence scores To summarize, some TDFs provide good safety, while others provide broad diversification, and still others provide low fees. To integrate these three benefits we’ve created a composite Prudence Score, detailed in the Appendix. The graph on the right shows the Top 20 Prudence Scores and compares them to Morningstar Ratings. The tendency is for the 8 highest prudence scores to get low Morningstar ratings. Four of the Top 8 have Morningstar ratings below 3. Prudence scores below the top 8 tend to get Morningstar ratings above 3.5 stars. The difference of course is performance, especially recent performance that has benefited from high US equity exposures. This “Group of 8” deserves your attention. Conclusion Fiduciaries now have a choice between TDF rating systems that are quite different. You can choose between Prudence and Performance. The cost of Prudence in rising markets is sacrificed Performance, but this sacrifice pays off in declining markets and can easily compensate for sacrifices. We hope you find this glide path report and Prudence Score helpful. We also hope that plan fiduciaries will vet their TDF selection. The fact that more than 60% of TDF assets are with the Big 3 bundled service providers suggests that fiduciaries are not considering alternative TDFs, so participants might not be getting the best; they’re simply getting the biggest. See our Infographic for more detail. Endnote Many thanks to PIMCO for letting me use their Glide Path Analyzer. It’s great. That said, the views expressed in this report are strictly my own. Disclosure : I sub-advise the SMART Target Date Fund Index that is included in this report. It’s treated exactly the same as all the other funds. Appendix: Constructing Prudence Scores The Prudence Score is not very quantitative, & much simpler than Morningstar ratings. It uses only 3 pieces of information: Fees: obtained from Morningstar # of diversifying risky assets at long dates: I counted these, & excluded allocations that are less than 1%. Some funds have meaningless allocations to commodities for example. Safety at target date: % allocation to cash & other safe assets, like short term bonds & TIPS. Here’s the table I filled out by hand: Company Fee (bps) # Risky % Safe SMART Index – Hand B&T 34 6 90 PIMCO RealPath Blend 28 6 30 Allianz 90 6 40 John Hancock Ret Choice 69 5 40 PIMCO RealPath 65 6 30 JP Morgan 82 6 30 Harbor 71 4 35 Blackrock Living Thru 98 5 35 Wells Fargo 53 5 25 Invesco 111 4 40 Putnam 105 3 40 MFS 102 6 25 Schwab 73 3 30 Guidestone 121 5 30 DWS 100 5 25 USAA 80 4 25 BMO 68 3 25 Franklin LifeSmart 110 5 25 TIAA-CREF 21 3 15 Vanguard 17 4 10 Hartford 117 5 25 Voya 113 6 20 Nationwide 89 6 15 American Century 96 4 20 Principal 86 6 10 Russell 92 5 15 Alliance Bernstein 101 4 20 Mass Mutual 97 5 15 T Rowe Price 79 4 15 Fidelity Index 16 3 5 Great West L1 99 4 15 Blackrock 98 5 10 John Hancock Ret Living 91 5 5 Great West L2 102 4 10 Manning & Napier 105 4 10 Fidelity 63 3 5 Mainstay 92 3 10 American Funds 93 3 10 Legg Mason 139 5 10 Franklin Templeton 110 4 8 Great West L3 95 4 5 State Farm 119 4 5 The next step is a little quantitative. I made up some rules for the importance of each factor: Safety got the highest importance. I adjusted the “% safe” allocations so the safest got a score of 25 Fees are 2nd in importance. I weighted them at 15. Diversification gets a max score of 10 Then I add the 3 scores for each & divide this sum by 10, so the highest composite score is 5: (25 + 15 +10)/10 The 1st table is totally verifiable. We can discuss the weighting scheme in the following 2nd table: Prudence Scores Company Fee (15) Divers(10) Protect(25) Prudence Mstar SMART Index – Hand B&T 12.8 10 25.0 4.8 1.5 PIMCO RealPath Blend 13.5 10 25.0 4.2 4 Allianz 6.0 10 25.0 4.1 1 John Hancock Ret Choice 8.5 7.5 25.0 4.1 2.9 PIMCO RealPath 9.0 10 18.8 3.8 4 JP Morgan 7.0 10 18.8 3.6 4 Harbor 8.3 5 21.9 3.5 3.4 Blackrock Living Thru 5.0 7.5 21.9 3.4 3.2 Wells Fargo 10.5 7.5 15.6 3.4 1 Invesco 3.4 5 25.0 3.3 4 Putnam 4.1 2.5 25.0 3.2 3.1 MFS 4.5 10 15.6 3.0 3.6 Schwab 8.1 2.5 18.8 2.9 3.6 Guidestone 2.2 7.5 18.8 2.8 3.3 DWS 4.8 7.5 15.6 2.8 3.3 USAA 7.2 5 15.6 2.8 3.5 BMO 8.7 2.5 15.6 2.7 4 Franklin LifeSmart 3.5 7.5 15.6 2.7 4 TIAA-CREF 14.4 2.5 9.4 2.6 3.5 Vanguard 14.9 5 6.3 2.6 3.5 Hartford 2.7 7.5 15.6 2.6 3.8 Voya 3.2 10 12.5 2.6 2.8 Nationwide 6.1 10 9.4 2.5 3.5 American Century 5.2 5 12.5 2.3 2.8 Principal 6.5 10 6.3 2.3 3.3 Russell 5.7 7.5 9.4 2.3 3.3 Alliance Bernstein 4.6 5 12.5 2.2 3.6 Mass Mutual 5.1 7.5 9.4 2.2 3.7 T Rowe Price 7.3 5 9.4 2.2 3.7 Fidelity Index 15.0 2.5 3.1 2.1 3.1 Great West L1 4.9 5 9.4 1.9 3.3 Blackrock 5.0 7.5 6.3 1.9 3.3 John Hancock Ret Living 5.9 7.5 3.1 1.6 3.2 Great West L2 4.5 5 6.3 1.6 3.4 Manning & Napier 4.1 5 6.25 1.5 4.2 Fidelity 9.3 2.5 3.1 1.5 3.3 Mainstay 5.7 2.5 6.3 1.4 3.6 American Funds 5.6 2.5 6.3 1.4 4.1 Legg Mason 0.0 7.5 6.3 1.4 3.3 Franklin Templeton 3.5 5 5.0 1.4 4 Great West L3 5.4 5 3.1 1.3 3.5 State Farm 2.4 5 3.1 1.1 3.2 PAGE * MERGEFORMAT 10 Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

VTINX: An Excellent ‘Set And Forget’ Retirement Income Fund

Summary VTINX is a fund-of-funds, but Vanguard does not charge any additional management fee. Globally diversified- about 30% equities, 70% fixed income. The fund’s ten year record puts in the top 10% of its peers. Morningstar has set up a group of mutual fund categories for Target-date retirement funds. These funds often appear in 401k and other retirement plans. A Target-date portfolio provides a diversified exposure to stocks, bonds, and cash for investors who have a specific scheduled retirement date. These portfolios aim to provide investors with an attractive level of return and risk, based solely on the target date. Over time, management adjusts the allocation among asset classes to more conservative mixes as the target date approaches. Morningstar divides target-date funds into the following categories: Target-Date 2000-2010 Target-Date 2011-2015 Target-Date 2016-2020 Target-Date 2021-2025 Target-Date 2026-2030 Target-Date 2031-2035 Target-Date 2036-2040 Target-Date 2041-2045 Target-Date 2050+ Retirement Income Many mutual fund families offer target-date mutual funds that roughly correspond to the Morningstar categories. For example, Vanguard currently offers twelve target-date funds: Target Retirement 2010, Target Retirement 2015, Target Retirement 2020, Target Retirement 2025, Target Retirement 2030, Target Retirement 2035, Target Retirement 2040, Target Retirement 2045, Target Retirement 2050, Target Retirement 2055, Target Retirement 2060, Target Retirement Income In theory, Target Retirement Income is the only one that is not supposed to continually change over time. Each of the other funds gradually evolves until seven years after their retirement income date when they are merged into Target Retirement Income. For example, Target Retirement 2020 will eventually resemble the Target Retirement Income fund in the year 2027. Of course, theory is not always the same as practice. In practice, Target Retirement Income has not been entirely static over the years. There have been several changes since inception: 2006: the allocation to stocks was increased from 20% to 30%, and three foreign stock funds were added. 2010: the allocation to foreign stocks was increased from 6% to 9%, and the three foreign stock funds were consolidated into Total International. 2013: A 14% position in Total International Bond was added, and Inflation-Protected Securities and Prime Money Market funds were dropped and replaced with Short-Term Inflation Index. 2015: The international equity allocation will increase from 30% to 40% of the equity allocation, and the international fixed income allocation will rise from 20% to 30% of nominal fixed income exposure. Overall Objective and Strategy The Target Retirement Income Fund is designed for investors already in retirement. The primary objective is current income with some capital appreciation. The fund currently invests in five Vanguard index funds. The fund holds approximately 30% of assets in equities and 70% in bonds. Fund Expenses The Vanguard Target Retirement Income Inv ( VTINX) is a fund-of-funds, but Vanguard does not change any management fee to assemble the funds for you. The expense ratio is 0.16% only because the five acquired funds. This is 67% lower than the average expense ratio of other mutual funds in this category. Minimum Investment VTINX has a minimum initial investment of $1,000. Past Performance VTINX is classified by Morningstar in the “Retirement Income” or RI category. Compared with other mutual funds in this category, VTINX has had solid performance, largely because of its low expenses. The fund is more defensive than most of its peers, and tends to outperform in weak markets like 2008, while underperforming in very strong years like 2009. These are the annual performance figures computed by Morningstar since 2005. VTINX Category (RS) Percentile Rank 2005 3.33% 3.30% 48 2006 6.38% 7.34% 56 2007 8.17% 4.46% 1 2008 -10.93% -18.06% 6 2009 14.28% 18.36% 80 2010 9.39% 8.94% 42 2011 5.25% 1.60% 9 2012 8.23% 9.01% 67 2013 5.87% 7.36% 56 2014 5.54% 4.36% 19 YTD -0.53% -1.99% 5 Last 5 Years 4.99% 3.67% 10 Source: Morningstar Ten Year Performance Graph VTINX – Current Portfolio Composition Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund 37.3% Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund 18.0% Vanguard Short-Term Inflation-Protected Securities Index Fund 16.8% Vanguard Total International Bond Index Fund 16.0% Vanguard Total International Stock Index fund 11.9% The current SEC Yield is 2.06%. Mutual Fund Ratings Lipper Ranking : Funds are ranked based on total return within a universe of funds with similar investment objectives. The Lipper peer group is Income. 1 Yr#92 out of 587 funds 5 Yr#208 out of 457 funds 10 Yr#68 out of 266 funds Morningstar Ratings : The Morningstar category is Retirement Income Overall 4 stars Out of 144 funds 3 Yr 4 stars Out of 144 funds 5 Yr 4 stars Out of 132 funds 10 Yr 4 stars Out of 64 funds Fund Management The fund is managed by three individuals in Vanguard’s Equity Investment Group. Michael H. Buek, CFA, Principal William Coleman Walter Mejman Comments There is a lot of research showing that diversification across regions, asset classes and market capitalizations can enhance long term risk adjusted returns. That is a key idea behind Vanguard’s target date retirement funds which allocate funds according to expected returns and investor risk tolerance based on the number of years left until retirement. Diversification is also useful for those already retired. The Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund provides a low cost, well diversified balance of income and growth. As of November 30, 2015, the fund had $10.58 billion invested. The fund’s fixed income holdings (around 70%) are well diversified including short, intermediate and long-term governments, agency and investment-grade corporate bonds. In addition, the fund owns inflation-protected, mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities and foreign bonds issued in non-U.S. currencies, but hedged by Vanguard to minimize currency exposure. The stock holdings (around 30%) are a diversified mix of U.S. and foreign stocks including large-caps, mid-caps and small caps. VTINX can serve very well as a core holding in a retirement account, and may also be used in taxable accounts by retired investors when IRA required minimum withdrawals are more than they need for living expenses. VTINX normally pays out quarterly distributions, but Vanguard allows you to set up your own automatic withdrawals as needed.