Can you folks recommend any other good online sources of historic performance data for mutual funds (namely, annual total returns) besides Y! and M*?

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Somehow I wasn't able to find the historic annual returns at Google Finance... if you did find them, canAgAuMoney wrote: I usually compare yahoo with google.
Why not take this further and simply own only the asset that's performing best? You could ditch the bonds and gold when stocks are going gangbusters, and toss the stocks and gold and bonds are knocking down the barn doors. The problem, of course, is being able to do this without making catastrophic mistakes. I know that personally, I'm no good at picking stocks at all, and I suspect I would be similarly rubbish at picking broad asset classes, or at least gauging when the timing would be right to switch. The PP, at least for me, is more about acknowledging my ignorance of the best asset or the right time to move into it.Clive wrote:Buying the market (stock index) has always seemed a rather odd approach to me. If you were running a trucking firm and hired all-and-anyone drivers rather than being more selective as to who might actually be appropriate/good drivers for the firm, then its obvious which of two firms might outlast/perform the other. When it comes to stocks many investors are prepared to hire a basket of good-bad-and-ugly without question. Whilst some individually selected may turn out to be bad eggs in the basket, at least you tried to avoid/reduce that risk - which is better than not having tried at all.AgAuMoney wrote:However, it should be noted that the vast majority of my stock allocation is individual stocks.
Clive, the scenario of an investment in US SCV stocks right before the Wall Street Crash of 1929 is actually IMO closer to a "best case worst-case scenario" than a "worst case worst-case scenario" and should be judged thusly. See Ed McQuarrie's artice "The Stock Market's Little Shop Of Horrors" for examples of where all stock portfolios did horribly in absolute (nominal) and relative (to inlfation or to investing in government bonds) over periods for far longer than 40 years.Clive wrote:If your investment horizon is 15+ years then there's the argument that all stocks can be a reasonable low risk choice. Using Kenneth French's data for Small Cap Value since 1927 to 2011, the worst 15 year period yielded a near 0% real return (spanned Wall Street Crash years). Otherwise the rewards were 'reasonable' (12.2% annualised real (after inflation) reward on average over 15 year periods).Why not take this further and simply own only the asset that's performing best?
Because I don't know what asset is best.Pointedstick wrote:Why not take this further and simply own only the asset that's performing best?Clive wrote:Buying the market (stock index) has always seemed a rather odd approach to me. ... Whilst some individually selected may turn out to be bad eggs in the basket, at least you tried to avoid/reduce that risk - which is better than not having tried at all.AgAuMoney wrote:However, it should be noted that the vast majority of my stock allocation is individual stocks.