Once available only to clients of the discount brokerage, a number of Schwab mutual funds are now being sold through third-party distributors, making them more widely accessible than before – and some of them might be worth a look.
The move includes most of Schwab’s active equity funds, all 10 of its fixed income funds and the Laudus MarketMasters Funds. They’ll be available to non-Schwab clients for the first time via fund supermarkets Fidelity, Ameritrade and TD Waterhouse, among others, and through clearing houses used by registered investment advisers.
For Schwab, the decision “is all about growth,” said Evelyn Dilsaver, president of Schwab Investment Management. The funds involved hold about $35 billion, and Dilsaver is hoping the move will bring in another $3 billion in the first year. (Schwab’s overall fund portfolio is worth about $145 billion, including some $105 billion in money funds.) Schwab is also contemplating broader distribution in the retirement savings market via 401(k) platforms, though Dilsaver said that isn’t likely to come until 2006.
“At the end of the day, the client buys performance, and I have to compete on performance within Schwab for the reps to recommend us,” Dilsaver said. “If I have to compete on performance inside Schwab, I may as well do it on the outside as well.”
For small investors, this may open up some interesting choices, though each offering deserves a careful evaluation, said Sonya Morris, a fund analyst with Morningstar Inc. One thing to watch for is fees. Schwab has a reputation as not being the cheapest fund shop on the street, but it’s not the most expensive either, Morris said. If more assets are drawn in, expenses might come down.
The actively managed equity funds employ a quantitative strategy, which means the manager makes decisions about which stocks to buy and sell with the help of a computer. Schwab’s equity rating system sifts through a universe of 3,000 U.S. stocks, evaluates their fundamentals, valuation, momentum and risk, and grades them from A to F. As you might imagine, A-rated stocks are expected to outperform over the next year, while F-rated stocks are expected to underperform. Some of the funds are relatively new, but the system has generally shown good results overall, Morris said.
The most established of Schwab’s actively managed equity funds, and the only one currently covered by Morningstar, is the Schwab Core Equity Fund (SWANX). It opened in 1996, but has been following its current model, focusing on A- and B-rated stocks, since 2002. It seeks to outperform the Standard &Poor’s 500, and has succeeded so far, rising 5.6 percent year-to-date and 16 percent over the last three years. It’s also reasonably priced, with a 0.75 percent expense ratio.
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