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Number Cruncher

Big funds can afford to cut some slack on fees

From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

WHAT WE'RE LOOKING AT

Big, expensive mutual funds. Are they earning their prodigious fees?

OUR SCREEN

Just two qualifications were needed to make today's list. The first was size – only funds with assets of more than $1-billion were included. The second was a management expense ratio above 2.5 per cent, which is quite hefty when you think about it. Imagine grossing 10 per cent in a fund and then having 2.5 per cent taken off the top (fund returns are reported on an after-fee basis, just FYI). You've just lost one-quarter of your gains.

To provide some perspective on the performance of today's funds, one-, three- and five-year quartile rankings have been included. Quartiles divide funds in a category by their returns – first quartile is best, fourth is worst.

WHAT WE FOUND

Think of this edition of the Number Cruncher as an informal investigation into the concept of economies of scale. In mutual fund terms, it suggests that large funds should be cheaper than small funds because they have a larger base of assets over which to spread their costs. Put another way, each unitholder theoretically carries a lighter fee load.

Economies of scale are enjoyed by unitholders of some mega-funds that do not appear on today's list. Take RBC Monthly Income, for example. It's the seventh-largest mutual fund in the land with assets of $7.2-billion and its MER is 1.14 per cent, which compares to an average of 2.42 per cent for its peers in the Canadian neutral balanced category. You could double the cost of owning RBC Monthly Income and it still wouldn't make the cut for today's screen.

Funds have to be big and pricey to make this list, with no apparent economies of scale for investors. What's this mean to their returns? In some cases, like AGF Global Value, high fees and lower-echelon performance go together. In others, as with Investors Retirement Growth Portfolio-A, high fees haven't impeded performance. Oh, wait. Globeinvestor.com shows that the older C version of Investors Retirement Growth Portfolio delivered below-average returns in the 15- and 20-year periods to March 31.

Own some big funds? See if you're benefiting from an economy of scale in terms of the fees you're paying. Remember, big funds can afford to be reasonable on fees.

NOTE

Excel Funds has provided updated information on the fees that were listed for several of its funds in the Number Cruncher chart on April. 27. The management expense ratios for Excel India, Excel China and Excel Chindia are 2.98, 3.19 and 3.34 per cent, respectively.

Funds with Assets greater than $1-billion, MER greater than 2.5%
Name MER Quartile
1-year
Quartile
3-year
Quartile
5-year
Category
Investors Retirement Gwth. Port.-A 2.84 1 1 1 Canadian Focused Equity
AGF Global Value 2.81 3 4 4 Global Equity
Sprott Canadian Equity 2.81 4 3 3 Natural Resources Equity
IA Clarington Canadian Dividend 2.72 3 2 2 Canadian Dividend and Income Equity
Investors European Equity-A 2.69 4 2 3 European Equity
Investors Global-A 2.69 2 1 1 Global Equity
Investors U.S. Large Cap Value-A 2.69 2 2 2 U.S. Equity
IG FI Canadian Allocation-A 2.68 3 1 1 Canadian Equity Balanced
IG Mackenzie Maxxum Dividend Gro-A 2.68 2 4 4 Canadian Dividend and Income Equity
Investors Canadian Balanced-A 2.68 1 1 1 Canadian Equity Balanced
Investors Canadian Equity-A 2.68 1 3 3 Canadian Focused Equity
Investors Cdn Large Cap Value-A 2.68 1 1 1 Canadian Focused Equity
Investors Dividend-A 2.68 1 3 2 Canadian Equity Balanced
Investors Mutual of Canada-A 2.68 3 3 2 Canadian Equity Balanced
Source: Globe Investor
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