T. Rowe Takes Top Spot in Russell Target-Date Metrics

The T. Rowe Price Retirement Target-Date Fund family came out in the lead of Russell Investments’ top five funds of the fourth quarter of 2009.

The funds were determined by Russell’s recently unveiled Target-Date Metric comparison.

A Russell news release said its methodology, unveiled in September, measures how well a fund family performed during a specific time period, to allow investors a way to evaluate various target-date offerings (see “Russell Unveils Target-Date Fund Family Performance Metrics“).

The T. Rowe Price family came out with a 207.7 ratio for a one-year period through the end of 2009. Others in the top five for Russell’s one-year ranking included:

  • JHancock2 Lifecycle (206.8)
  • Oppenheimer Transition (194.8)
  • AllianceBernstein Retirement Strategy (171.7)
  • Franklin Templeton Retirement Target (171.5).

Russell said it compared the retirement wealth generated by a family of target-date funds to the wealth generated by some selected benchmark over typical historical intervals. The calculation took into account all aspects of the each family’s investment process, including active management, asset allocations within equity and fixed income, and glide path design.

The company said the weight attached to each fund’s return was determined by the location of each fund along the glide path and the pattern of cash contributions.

More information is available at www.russell.com/indexes/promo/target_date_metric.asp.

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Russell Target-Date Metric

Target-Date Fund Family
  3-year ratio through 4Q09
Franklin Templeton Retirement  104.6
American Century LIVESTRONG  98.9
Wells Fargo Advantage  95.1
MFS Lifetime  90.2
JPMorgan Smart Retirement  86.5

Source: Russell Investments

Short-Term Redemption Fees No Longer Needed?

A new study suggests mutual fund companies might no longer need to keep in place short-term redemption fees that were imposed in 2003 as a result of controversy over market timing.

Strategic Insight (SI), an Asset International company, asserted in a new report, “Are Short-Term Redemption Fees Still Needed?,” that market-timing activity largely aimed at taking advantage of arbitrage opportunities in international equity funds has become rare if it happens at all. As a result, SI said more than 400 individual funds have removed short-term holding redemption fees in recent years including offerings from Franklin Templeton, BlackRock, OpppenheimerFunds, MFS, Van Kampen, DWS, Dreyfus, Allianz, Pioneer, Artio, and others.

“Not surprisingly, many asset managers and their boards that instituted short-term redemption fees post-2003 have subsequently decided to remove these fees as they are no longer experiencing money movement directly related to market-timing issues and have concluded that the costs and inefficiencies of short-term redemption fees far outweigh their marginal benefits,” said SI author Dennis Bowden.

That leaves more than 1,500 actively managed, open-end stock and bond funds (managing more than a total of $1 trillion) that still have the charges in place. While the Domestic Equity category has the largest number of funds with redemption fees, International Equity funds constitute the largest in terms of total assets and second largest by number, according to SI.

Redemption-fee funds also constitute the largest share of total funds and total assets within the International Equity fund type, according to the SI data.

Bowden said funds that removed short-term redemption fees did not experience subsequent changes in asset velocity and redemption activity, and that no atypical redemption activity can be attributed to the removal of the charges. In fact, the report said, fund companies continuing to maintain the fees may now be finding they are more of a problem than a help—particularly when competing for new business.

Bowden concluded by calling for an industrywide discussion about whether the fees continue to be necessary. 


The report can be purchased at www.sionline.com.

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