Simple Sector Fund Rotation System Outperforms the
Market
The overall stock market has had a rough seven years.
If you look at the performance of the S&P 500
from 1999 through 2005, you'll see that it was up
about 0.2% compounded annual return, not much better
than a savings account, and the Nasdaq 100 has fared
even worse. It got there in an interesting way, but
overall it basically went nowhere.
For investors looking to improve that performance,
what alternatives to index funds or buy and hold
investing are there? Sector mutual fund investing,
using a rotation strategy has been shown to work by a
variety of different newsletters and advisors. Many
of the top performing advisory newsletters in the
Hulbert Financial Digest use this type of strategy.
This is easily done using sector funds, such as the
Fidelity Select Funds family.
Here we look at a mutual fund trading system that
trades the Fidelity Select Mutual Funds. The Fidelity
Select Mutual Funds are a good choice for several
reasons:
* Fidelity Select Mutual Funds historically have
persistence in their trends so they can be held for
the Fidelity imposed minimum 30 day holding period
while realizing a return well above that of the
market.
* If the funds are held for a 30 day minimum,
Fidelity allows unlimited trading
with†no†redemption fees.
* With over 40 Fidelity Select Funds, there is a
sector fund is available to track most market
sectors. If there is strength in any domestic market
sector, youíll probably capture it using Fidelity
Select Funds. The diverse choices include Fidelity
Select Energy, Fidelity Select Biotechnology,
Fidelity Select Gold, and Fidelity Select Health.
* Fidelity's minimum investment for the Fidelity
Select Funds is only $2500 per fund, so thatís all
you need to start. There is no longer a load on the
Select funds.
Many Fidelity Select rotation strategies have been
published, dating back to the late 1990ís, but this
example is one of the simplest to follow. The steps
are as follows:
1) Track the 25 day (or 5 week) price change in all
Fidelity Select Mutual Funds.
2) Invest in the Select Fund with the highest
percentage gain over that 5 weeks.
3) Hold the top Select fund for at least 30 calendar
days, to avoid the Fidelity early redemption fees.
4) After 30 days, if the currently held Select Fund
is still the top Select fund, continue to hold it.
Otherwise, exchange it immediately for the top ranked
Select fund.
5) Hold the new Select Fund for 30 calendar days
For the 1999 to 2005 years that the major indices
have been almost flat, this sector fund rotation
system gained almost 200%, or about 16% per year.
There is one significant weakness to this strategy.
Itís drawdown is about the same as the overall
market. During the down years of 2000 to 2002 this
strategy had a drawdown of almost 50%. Fortunately,
it has achieved new all time highs in 2006, but that
kinds of drawdown need to be factored in to how much
you might want to invest in this or any investment
strategy.
As you can see, even a simple sector rotation
strategy can give a real performance advantage over
buy and hold investing. This simple Fidelity Select
Funds trading system is a great example.