Fidelity Magellan Fund

The Fidelity Magellan Fund (Mutual fund: FMAGX) is a U.S.-domiciled mutual fund from the Fidelity family of funds. It is perhaps the world's best-known actively managed mutual fund, known particularly for its record-setting growth under the management of Peter Lynch from 1977 to 1990. On January 14, 2008, Fidelity announced that the fund would open to new investors for the first time in over a decade.

By the end of the 20th century the Magellan Fund had well over $100 billion in assets under management. For quite some time it was the single largest mutual fund in the world until April 2000, when it was displaced by Vanguard's S&P 500 index fund.

Overview

Fidelity earns its income, like most mutual funds, from fees charged on its assets under management (AUM). From the fund's inception in 1963 through 1977 Magellan grew to $20 million in AUM. The $20 million fund Peter Lynch inherited grew to $14 billion in AUM during his tenure. During Morris Smith's tenure, AUM grew from $14 billion to $20 billion. During Jeffrey Vinik's it grew to $50 billion. Bob Stansky certainly experienced the most volatility with respect to AUM during his time with Magellan. In July 1996, his first month as manager, more than $3.5 billion was taken out of the fund as investors redeemed their shares and the portfolio experienced setbacks. Stansky quickly moved out of bonds and into stocks to stop the assets from flowing out. On September 30, 1997, Fidelity decided to close the Magellan Fund to new investors. They believed that the size of the fund was beginning to make it difficult to beat the market. The largest growth of the fund occurred under Lynch's management with a growth in assets invested in the fund from $18 million to $14 billion during his tenure.[1] However, the best annual return was 116.08% in 1965, and the best three year record was 68.32% annualized between 1965 and 1967, as the fund was operating with limited assets and oversight.[2]

Lynch took the reins in May 1977 and remained the manager of Magellan for the next thirteen years.[3] Between 1977 and 1990 the fund averaged over a 29% annual return, making Magellan the best performing mutual fund in the world.[4] Lynch created the investment process commonly referred to as “Buy What You Know."[5] Lynch proposed that the person on the street is just as capable of identifying good stocks as a Wall Street professional, and noted that many of his best stock picks came from his experiences with a company as a customer, rather than through usual trade publication or analyst reports. Many good tips came from his wife, who did most of the household shopping and occasionally noticed customer trends before professionals did, a phenomenon he called "street lag". Lynch bucked many prevailing trends on mutual fund investing, such as buying many more stocks than usual. Magellan had about 60 stocks when Lynch took over, and he was advised to trim that number to 25-30. He instead bought hundreds of stocks he believed were bargains, including the then-unusual step of owning multiple stocks from the same industry (e.g., dozens of savings and loan association or convenience stores).[6] In 1989, Magellan held an unheard-of 1,400 stocks.[6]

Morris Smith replaced Lynch as the manager of Magellan. During the two years he was there he managed to beat the S&P 500 by 7%. He decided to leave investing entirely after his experience at Magellan and has spent time pursuing religious activities.[7] Jeffrey Vinik spent four years managing Magellan and during that time he produced an 83.70% cumulative return and outperformed the cumulative S&P500 return by 5.91%. Vinik is most often remembered as the manager who moved a high percentage of the portfolio out of technology stocks and into bonds at the wrong time, causing Magellan to underperform its peers for the first time in the fund's history. However, others argue that Vinik merely moved into bonds early. Vinik moved Magellan into bonds in the fall of 1995. In the seven years ending in March 2003, on a total return basis, 10-year Treasuries returned 78 percent, AAA corporate bonds returned 46 percent, and, with dividends reinvested, the S&P 500 returned 31 percent. In addition, Vinik's strategy would have avoided the dot-com bust.[8]

Robert "Bob" Stansky is a direct disciple of Lynch's having worked as his research assistant from 1984 to 1987. During his time at Magellan Stansky managed to return 238% for the fund. However, the S&P 500 index returned 274% during the same period. This marked the only regime where Magellan underperformed the market. Magellan's portfolio closely resembled the S&P 500 during Stansky's tenure—so much so that Stansky himself helped coin the phrase "closet indexer". Harry W. Lange represented a change for the Magellan fund. His approach was known as a 'go everywhere approach'. This means he was just as likely to buy small cap stocks as he was large cap stocks, value as he was growth, US companies as he was international.

By the time Stansky retired in 2005, the assets under management for Magellan were back down to $52.5 billion. Harry Lange took over Magellan and promptly changed the portfolio to reflect his view on the market. Today about 25 percent of Magellan is invested in companies based outside the United States. In May 2006, Magellan made a capital gains distribution to shareholders of $22.11 representing roughly 18% of assets. As of 12/31/08 the total AUM for the Magellan Fund stands at $19 billion. Lange has said that he believes Magellan can handle more assets. After being closed for over a decade, on January 14, 2008, Fidelity announced that the fund would be re-opened to new investors.[9]

On September 13, 2011, Fidelity named Jeffrey S. Feingold, manager of Fidelity Trend Fund, as the next manager of Fidelity Magellan Fund.[10][11] Harry Lange presided over the largest drop in assets under management, as a percentage, as well as in absolute dollars, of Magellan.

Financial performance

Period Total Return S&P 500 Return Difference
2010 12.4% 14.9% (2.50%)
2009 41.1% 26.5% 14.60%
2008 (49.66%) (38.91%) (10.75%)
2007 18.84% 3.53% 15.31%
2006 7.22% 15.79% (8.57%)
2005 6.42% 4.91% 1.51%
2004 7.49% 10.88% (3.39%)
2003 24.82% 26.68% (1.86%)
2002 (23.66%) (22.10%) (1.56%)
2001 (11.65%) (11.89%) 0.24%
2000 (9.29%) (9.11%) (0.18%)
1999 24.05% 21.04% 3.01%
1998 33.63% 28.58% 5.05%
1997 26.59% 33.36% (6.77%)
1996 11.69% 22.96% (11.27%)
1995 36.82% 37.58% (0.76%)
1994 (1.81%) 1.32% (3.13%)
1993 24.66% 10.08% 14.58%
1992 7.01% 7.62% (0.61%)
1991 41.03% 30.47% 10.56%
1990 (4.51%) (3.10%) (1.41%)
Portfolio Manager Tenure Assets under Management at end of tenure
Edward Johnson, III 1963 to 12/1971 $20 million
Richard Habermann 1/1972 to 5/1977 $18 million
Peter Lynch 5/1977 to 5/1990 $14 billion[12]
Morris J. Smith 5/1990 to 7/1992 $20 billion
Jeffrey N. Vinik 7/1992 to 6/1996 $50 billion
Robert E. Stansky 6/1996 to 10/2005 $52.5 billion
Harry W. Lange 10/2005 to 9/2011 $14.7 billion
Jeffrey S. Feingold 9/2011 to present Not applicable
gollark: Did we ever get a palaiologistical answer to the thing?
gollark: A+B or A. A has $1000 000 iff the oracle predicted you would only pick it. B has a fixed $10 000.
gollark: Depending on the model of time travel in use, you continuously generate alternate timelines, don't do the thing in the first place as the universe forbids it, or run into some ridiculously unlikely failure state of the apiochronoformic system in use.
gollark: Newcomb's paradox, yes.
gollark: Personal... scales, assuming you can guess how massive the empty box is?

References

  1. "Mutual Fund Legend Peter Lynch's Advice about Investing". Business Insider. 13 December 2013.
  2. "Stock Quotes, Business News and Data from Stock Markets - MSN Money". www.msn.com.
  3. "Interview With Peter Lynch - Betting On The Market - FRONTLINE - PBS". www.pbs.org.
  4. "AJCU: Peter Lynch". AJCU. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  5. "Investing: Buy What You Know - GuruFocus.com". www.gurufocus.com.
  6. Lynch, Peter (1989). One Up On Wall Street. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Paperback. ISBN 978-0-671-66103-8.
  7. Schiller, Gail. "Trading Places: An Interview with Morris Smith". aishcom.
  8. Mahar, Maggie. "Bull! A History of the Boom and Bust, 1982-2004" Harper Collins Publishers, Inc. 2004
  9. https://www.cnbc.com/id/22649806/site/14081545
  10. "New Portfolio Manager Appointments". www.fidelity.com.
  11. Condon, Christopher (13 September 2011). "Fidelity Names Feingold to Succeed Lange at Magellan Fund". Bloomberg.
  12. "Mutual Fund Legend Peter Lynch's Advice about Investing". Business Insider. 13 December 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.