70% of GARS is curently invested in the Standard Life Managed Fund, i recently checked this with their UK managers.
Who is the Gars fund manager.I like to know the record of the manager as well as the fund.
70% of GARS is curently invested in the Standard Life Managed Fund, i recently checked this with their UK managers.
Therefore as a retail investor you are paying Hedge Fund type AMC for a normal balanced managed fund.
Go look at a good ETF BOND Equity Mix depending on your ability to take risk.
I contacted standard life today and I was told they cannot sell this product directly it needs to be sold through a broker.
Does this means that access fees can vary or is there a standard charge.?
Also. Can you buy into the GARS fund in sterling as a way to protect against a euro collapse?
Finally - I have a pension fund in a low risk fund - its increased 2% ytd - at 36 - its held through invesco could I transfer this to something like GARS - standard life.
Thanks,
R
I have looked at this fund in considerable detail and I conclude that it is the Emperor's new clothes. A good marketing campaign but with no real substance.
The risk return trade off is equivalent to a 40% risk portfolio with 40% in real assets and 60% in fixed interest as can be seen clearly in the graph below:
The volatility of the fund is approx the same as short term gilts (up to 5 years) and when I tested the sterling institutional share class against uk 5 year gilts (which you can just purchase from State Street for 0.15%pa) the excess returns almost totally evaporate.
Now granted, there is some alpha on a discrete annual basis (1.68%pa on average) but the volatility of the alpha is quite high (11.46) from year to year meaning that it is hard to establish if the fund managers are doing well due to luck or skill. In fact, i'd need 186 years of retuns just to be 95% sure that they are really skilled so I conclude that I can't recommend anyone invests now on the off chance that these fund managers are skilled because none of us a going to live long enough to find out.
I think a more pertinent question for investors is what exactly is in GARS? The strategic portfolios are long only portfolios of index funds based on a strategic asset allocation that hasn't changed dramatically since 2008 and which are rebalanced annually. Nice and simple nothing complicated.
"Never invest in anything you can't illustrate with a crayon" - Peter lynch.
I can also provide audited report and accounts for each underlying investment fund. I therefore have a very good idea of my risk exposure at all times. I can't say than about GARS. There is too much ideosyncratic risk associated with the tactical allocation decisions being taken by the fund managers. Some of these bets will win and some will lose. But overall all that they are really doing is adding a layer of costs through additional turnover.
If we have broadly the same risk exposure, then over time I'll win. It's Aesop's fable of the tortoise and the Hare. As Bill Sharpe says its a mathematical certainty that I'll win.
I am aware of the marketing position regarding volatility but all that matters ex post is the realised volatility for an investor.
Over the 36 months ended may this year GARs had an annualised volatility of 5.64 which is within the target range granted.
But the 40% risk portfolio had a realised volatility of 5.15.
Source: Financial Express analytics
For investors who required a higher expected return they simply needed to take more risk. Investors looking for more capital security could select less risk exposure.
By contrast any tactical asset allocation fund will be constantly putting risk on and taking risk off. How am I as a financial planner to determine how much risk my clients are exposed to if the fund is designed to flap about in a wide range from 4 to 8%? Which is it 4 or 8? To put that into perspective 95% of the time if I am targeting an average return of 6%pa my range of returns is actually going to lie somewhere between plus/minus 8 and plus/minus 16% of that 6%pa.
It's not a precise enough tool.
This analysis is intended for educational purposes only and is not intended to represent a specific recommendation for investors. Prospective investors should always seek advice from a suitably qualified investment professional.
offiah, as you know the facts of this fund, please advise commentary on this point, in order that persons are aware of the full facts before considering an investment.
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