The 5 Best Stock Funds for 2010
Focus on funds that buy large companies with above-average growth rates. And don’t shy from emerging markets.
If there’s a theme to the stock market recovery, it’s that stocks of more speculative companies have soared. Stocks of deeply indebted companies and small companies, particularly, have rebounded sharply since the market bottomed in March.
But they had it coming. Many of these stocks had been pulverized during the bear market, so they’re mainly making up for lost ground. When you look at the year to date, the real winners emerge. Through
Expect large growth stocks to excel again in 2010. What’s more, I think large growth stocks and the funds that invest in them will lead the pack whether the bull market continues or we fall into another bear market.
The U.S. economy is still on the sick list, and the recovery is almost certain to remain anemic. In such a difficult environment, large companies with strong balance sheets and solid growth in revenues and earnings should be the top performers. Most of these companies reap an increasing percentage of their sales from selling in quickly growing emerging markets. Plus, most of these stocks are still surprisingly cheap given their attributes.
Don’t neglect emerging-markets stocks next year either. The world really has changed. Developing nations, particularly
Five funds to buy now
Large-company growth fund Vanguard Primecap Core closed to most investors earlier this year, so near-clone Primecap Odyssey Growth (symbol POGRX) is the best way to invest in the same strategy. I think it makes sense for 40% of your stock money. Many of the same managers that launched the original Vanguard Primecap fund in 1984 are still in charge here -- and their track record is terrific. Since its inception, Vanguard Primecap has returned an annualized 13.5% -- three percentage points per year better than the S&P 500.
Primecap Odyssey Growth currently owns big helpings of technology and health-care stocks. Top holdings include such high-quality companies as
Fairholme (FAIRX) has committed few errors since its inception ten years ago. In every year except 2003, manager
Invest another 10% of your stock money in T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value (PRSVX). The fund will shine if the market proves me wrong and pushes up prices of small-company stocks. Manager
In fact, I’d put another 5% of your money into another T.
For the main portion of your foreign-stock investments, I’d choose Masters’
Steve Goldberg is an investment adviser.
Before investing, consider the funds' investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. Contact Fidelity for a prospectus containing this information. Read it carefully.
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