+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

A fund that hasn't bought any new stocks in 80 years is beating 98% of its competitors

Mar 3, 2015, 15:06 IST

The managers currently running the Voya Corporate Leaders Trust Fund have never actively picked a new stock for the fund. In fact, one likely hasn't been picked during their lifetimes. Perhaps their parents' lifetimes too.

Advertisement

The fund hasn't been genuinely reshuffled since 1935, according to this amazing story from Reuters. It's taken on the stocks of parent companies when firms it owned were acquired or merged, but it hasn't made an independent decision to invest in a new company for 80 years.

Here's a snippet from the piece. It seems almost too good to be true, but the figures speak for themselves:

The plan is simple, and the results have been good. Light on banks and heavy on industrials and energy, the fund has beaten 98 percent of its peers, known as large value funds, over both the past five and ten years, according to Morningstar.

Here's how that looks, from Voya itself:

Advertisement

Voya Investment Management

They've benefited from picking up a healthy chunk of Berkshire Hathaway stocks, after some of their earlier holdings were bought up by Warren Buffett's outfit. Here's Reuters again:

Some of its holdings are unchanged, including DuPont, General Electric, Procter & Gamble and Union Pacific. Others were spun off from or acquired from original components, including Berkshire Hathaway (successor to the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway); CBS (acquired by Westinghouse Electric and renamed); and Honeywell (which bought Allied Chemical and Dye). Some are just gone, including the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. and American Can. Twenty-one stocks remain in the fund.

A lot of people recommend that casual investors don't try to be day traders and stock-pickets, and advise people to buy into index funds. But even those funds, which track stock indexes, are changed every now and again, if only for rebalancing purposes: Companies rise onto and fall off the index as they grow or shrink. Not picking any stocks for 80 years is something else entirely.

NOW WATCH: This Video Of The Largest Breakage Of Ice From A Glacier Ever Filmed Is Absolutely Frightening

Please enable Javascript to watch this video
Next Article