Here’s the reality: many local investors
would be better off investing in a Singapore equity fund. Am I saying all investors would be better off?
No. There’s every chance a savvy stock picker will see their portfolio
performance outperform the market. But not everyone has the time or inclination
to wade through years of annual reports and mountains of data, and such people
are a relatively small part of the population.
So a good number of local
investors would be better off in a fund.
Here’s why.
Singapore fund beat
the STI over long time periods
The Straits Times Index is the benchmark index for the
Singapore stock market, and consists of the 30 largest companies listed on the
Singapore Exchange. Aberdeen Singapore Equity Fund is a portfolio of equities managed
by Aberdeen Asset Management Asia. The fund is one of the longest running funds
in the business, having launched in December 1997.
Disclosure: I have a
position in the Aberdeen Singapore Equity Fund.
Source: iFAST compilations, in S$ terms, dividends reinvested, extracted 2 Nov 2012. |
The data shows, S$100 invested in the STI and the Aberdeen
Singapore Equity Fund would have seen remarkably different growth over more
than 14 years. From end-97 to end-Oct 2012, $100 in the STI would have grown
into $202, while $100 in the Aberdeen fund would have grown into $472. I’d
wager few, if any, stocks on the STI can boast similar growth over the same
time period.
Singapore fund beats
the STI over good and bad market conditions
To get a clearer picture of how the fund does in good and
bad markets we look at the yearly returns of the fund against the STI. For
simplicity, a year that sees positive returns is ‘good’, while a year that sees
negative return is ‘bad’. A fund does better when it beats the benchmark.
Source: iFAST compilations, in S$ terms, dividends reinvested, extracted 2 Nov 2012. |
More often or not, the fund beats the benchmark. In 9 good
years, the fund did better 6 times. In bad years, the fund did better 5 times.
Again, I’d wager few, if any, individual stocks can post similar performance.
Granted, an individual stock might outperform the STI and
the fund for an extended period of time. But bearing in mind many of us, the
author included, are not savvy stock pickers, the question is, “What are the
odds of an individual picking such a stock?”
Many Funds Beat The
STI in 2012
Passive investing purists will rightly point out I’ve only
considered one fund. What about the rest?
To be fair, Aberdeen Singapore Equity
is the rare fund with 14+ years of track record we can pit against the STI to
show an actively-managed fund can indeed beat an index. From end-2011 to end-Oct
2012 (also termed as ‘year-to-date’), a total of 12 Singapore equity funds have
posted returns greater than the 15% STI return.
I’ll just name three, including
the Singapore Dividend Equity Fund, Amundi Spore Dividend Growth, and JF
Singapore, but if you’re really curious, you can head down to
Fundsupermart.com, and generate a list of Singapore Equity Funds to look at.
And that’s why, in the case of Singapore equity at least,
I’ll choose a fund over a stock any time.
No comments:
Post a Comment