The Best Fidelity Investments Funds to Diversify Your Portfolio
We get a lot of questions about the best funds to build
a well diversified portfolio. There are many factors that
go into it, but here is an article we published that
describes one way to identify some good candidates. This
article builds around the Fidelty funds, but the same
approach can be used to select ETFs to get many of the
sam benefits.
Almost any article in the popular press about
building an investment portfolio is quick to advise
that you need to build a diversified portfolio. You
then get some rule of thumb about buying stocks and
bonds, or you need to buy 8 stocks from different
industries, or you need 5% in precious metals or
international stocks.
Here we will analyze the
best mutual funds for
diversifying your portfolio, and we will put try to
quantify the impact, so you can see for yourself the
improvement to not just the total return but the
reduction in portfolio risk that you can get by
properly diversifying.
The key to making diversification work is to find
alternatives to the investments that you already have
that not only have superior returns, but are not
correlated to your current holdings, that is their
day to day changes in value do not track another of
your existing holdings.
For this example, we will use the
Fidelity mutual
funds family, simply because there are over 100
Fidelity equity funds alone, including the
Fidelity
Select Funds. This gives us a large universe of
diverse options that should allow us to find the
best
Fidelity funds for our portfolio, with the convenience of
keeping it all in one account.
We will start with a basic diversified portfolio of
70% Fidelity FSMKX, which tracks the S&P 500. Add
to that a 30% holding of bonds, Fidelity Bond Index
(FBIDX). This portfolio, if rebalanced quarterly from
1995 to 2005 inclusive, would have returned 11%
annualized. The maximum drawdown (that is the most
its value dropped from a previous peak) would have
been a fairly steep 30% or almost 3 times the annual
return. That of course was after the over 2 year bear
market from March 2000 to October 2002 (when the
S&P 500 had a 50% drawdown, which was better than
the Nasdaq 100 almost 80%).
We then calculated the correlation of the Fidelity
Equity Funds to that portfolio, while screening out
some of the more volatile Select Family. The best
Fidelity funds that showed a very low correlation to
our portfolio were the Fidelity Real Estate fund and
Fidelity Health Care fund. Both of these Fidelity
funds have a long history (over 15 years) of
providing reasonable good returns with reasonable
drawdowns.
We reconstructed our diversified portfolio by adding
15% of each of these funds, so we now have and
redistributing the rest, so the allocation now is:
50% S&P 500 index (FSMKX)
20% Fidelity bond index (FBIDX)
15% Fidelity Real Estate (FRESX)
15% Fidelity Select Health Care (FSPHX)
The portfolio was again rebalanced quarterly, for the
same 11 years 1995 to 2005 inclusive. There resulting
return was 12.5% per year, 1.5% better than the
beginning portfolio. In addition, the drawdown was
reduced to 24%, compared to 30% before. The drawdown
is now only 2 times the annual return, a significant
improvement.
As you can see, the real power of diversification is
brought into play when we understand that low
correlation between our investment holdings is key to
making diversification work. Choosing a mutual fund
family like
Fidelity Investments that has a broad
choice of sector mutual funds is a key part of
choosing the best mutual funds for our investment
portfolio. You can learn more about this type of diversification
in our
free mutual fund newsletter.