Stock fund investors get in the groove.
From the WSJ by Tom Lauricella dated May 25, '06.
Earnings beat S&P 500 during the past 5 years instead of lagging behind.
Study after study hsas shown mutual fund investors piling into stock funds at precisely the wrong time - as prices are peaking. But one new report suggests that in the past five years, fund investors actually may have gotten it right. From 2002 to 2005, the average stock fund investor earned 15.3%, while the S&P 500 index rose 14.4%, according to Dalbar Inc., a financial services consulting company. Over the five-year period through the end of 2005, the average stock-fund investor earned 1.6%, while the S&P 500 edged up 0.5%.
The good performance of stock fund investors over the past several years contrasts with the study's long term findings, which show investors lagging far behind the market. For the 10-year period ended Dec. 31, the average stock investor earned 5.8%. That was far behind the S&P, which gained 9.1%.
That gap in performance is partly because of investors piling into stocks just before the collapse of the tech-stock bubble. In recent years, many investoirs have been moving more money into international stock funds, which have far outpaced the S&P 500.
Louis Harvey, president of Dalbar, says the recent good performance by stock-fund investors compared with the S&P 500 may be owing to investors' hanging on after the bear markey and profiting from the recovery in stocks. Investors, on balance, didn't yank their money out, and "can take better advantage" of the bounce back, he said. As a result, stock-fund investors "are doing extremely well - the market is moving in their favor," "They certainly are behaving smarter,"
http://www.WSJ.com/onlinetoday