- Breaking News Growing Older: Getting married again later in life depends on many
- Breaking News Ask Amy: Woman Shouldn t Have to Out Gay Friend
- Breaking News Your Turn: 9/11 mastermind's trial makes us look foolish
- Breaking News Readers' Forum: Helping Californians get back to work
Fidelity's Discovery is designed for flexibility
0 Comments | Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Aug 27, 2006 | by Kiplinger Group
From the day his high school economics class visited Fidelity Investments' offices nearly 30 years ago, Scott Offen knew he'd one day manage money for the Boston fund giant.
Offen struck out twice in his quest for employment with Fidelity. But after dropping out of college, he landed a temporary job as a file clerk in Fidelity's research library. The rest, as they say, is history. Offen showed enough spunk and smarts to eventually win a promotion to stock analyst. Over the next 17 years, he covered more than 15 industries and ran eight sector funds.
Most Popular Articles
Most Recent Articles
Most Popular Publications
Most Recent Publications
Today, Offen continues to prove that a college degree isn't a prerequisite for success in the high-powered world of mutual fund management. Over the past three years to July 3, Fidelity Value Discovery returned 19 percent annualized, an average of eight percentage points per year ahead of Standard & Poor's 500-stock index and four points per year better than all U.S.-oriented funds that target bargain-priced stocks.
Offen's background aside (he's the only degree-less manager in a shop filled with MBAs), Value Discovery is intriguing for several other reasons. First, with assets of $575 million, the fund is relatively small by Fidelity standards. That gives Offen, 46, the opportunity to buy and sell stocks without disturbing share prices.
And that's important because Offen, who designed Value Discovery with flexibility in mind, invests in undervalued companies of all sizes. Moreover, he takes an expansive view of value investing and therefore doesn't restrict himself to any particular formula or strategy. "It doesn't make sense to be dogmatic and rigid," says Offen. "To me, this is a better way of investing from a value perspective."
Like many classic value investors, Offen seeks companies with shares that sell at a low price in relation to profits or assets. But he's also willing to invest in companies that are cheap in relation to their competitors, their growth potential or the overall stock market.
At last report, the fund held 267 stocks, with 21 percent of assets in the financial sector, 17 percent in technology and 15 percent in energy. According to Morningstar, 56 percent of assets were in large companies and 35 percent were in midsize concerns. The fund's biggest holdings as of March 31 were JPMorgan Chase, Pfizer, National Oilwell Varco, Valero Energy and American International Group.
Value Discovery (symbol FVDFX; 800-544-8544) requires an initial minimum investment of $2,500. The fund doesn't charge commissions, and its annual expense ratio of 0.99 percent is below average. It's a reasonable choice for the part of your portfolio dedicated to bargain-priced stocks.
- Payday loans good option
- Joan Kennedy's troubles linked to alcohol struggle
- Payday lenders protest potential rate cap
- Private sector investing in charter schools
- Payday loans useful options
- 2 injured when truck runs over vehicle
- Deseret News (Salt Lake City)
- It is critical that immigrants learn English
- Getting to the root of beautiful hair: shiny, silky hair begins with a healthy scalp - includes list of resources and a recipe for an herbal scalp tonic
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- Taylor Fund L.P. Gains 40.53% in Third Quarter
- SAS #82: sword or shield?
- Personality and organizational citizenship behavior
- Fighting financial reporting fraud
- The Middle Management Challenge: Moving From Crisis to Empowerment. - book reviews