"International investing is fun, until you discover your fund owns stocks tarred by scandal. How can an investor avoid finding herself in this position? In the dark
By Gretchen Morgenson
WHEN MORGAN GRENFELL Asset Management fired its European Growth Fund manager in September for investing improprieties, U.S. investors paid scant attention. So what if the disgraced Peter Young made big bets on high-flying and illiquid stocks, sometimes exceeding the limits of U.K. securities laws? Few, if any, American investors held shares in the $2 billion fund.
Peter Young may be gone. But some of the most speculative stocks he favored remain, not only in the Morgan Grenfell funds he managed, but also in six American-based funds. Unreported in this country is the fact that some of these show up in Dean Witter's International SmallCap Fund ($142 million assets) and its World Wide Investment Trust ($504 million assets). They also appear in four classes of a fund managed by State Street Research: International Equity A, B, C and D. Total assets in these four look-alikes: $86 million.
Of the roughly 100 European positions in Dean Witter's International SmallCap Fund—accounting for 36% of the entire portfolio—9 are companies that are found in Peter Young's portfolio. Of the 138 European positions in the firm's World Wide Investment Trust, 10 also appear in the troubled Morgan Grenfell portfolio. State Street Research's funds have 4 European positions in common with Young's portfolio.
It wouldn't be so worrisome if the stocks common to these portfolios were household names. They're not. They are, for the most part, obscure companies that appear in few, if any, other international mutual funds' holdings.
We're not talking minuscule money here. The second-largest holding in the Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund is a dubious Peter Young pick, SinterCast AB. One of his obscure numbers, Ashurst Technology (formerly Emtech Ltd.), is the sixth-largest holding of the State Street Research funds.
Why do these portfolios look so much alike? Their holders may not realize it, but the funds are run by either Morgan Grenfell or Morgan Grenfell alums.
Dean Witter has its own mutual fund subsidiary, called Intercapital Asset Management, but it hired Morgan Grenfell as subadviser to both Dean Witter funds. And the State Street Research funds were run by Stephen Bamford, and a team of former Morgan Grenfell money managers, until Bamford left the firm in April. They are now run by Ian Vose, a former money manager at Morgan Grenfell Asset Management in London in the 1980s.
In the world of international investing, it's common for U.S. fund companies to farm out portfolio management to subadvisers presumably better acquainted with world markets. Even though all advisers are identified in fund prospectuses, few American fundholders likely realize their investments are being managed by another firm. It is especially unlikely that holders of the Dean Witter and State Street funds realize that their money is being run by a firm in the midst of a scandal.
Citing firm policy, Suzanne Platenic, a Dean Witter spokesman, would not let Forbes talk to the fund managers in question. Despite repeated requests, she declined to provide details of the two funds' holdings. Asked whether Dean Witter was reconsidering its relationship with Morgan Grenfell, she said that the recent press regarding Morgan Grenfell Asset Management had nothing to do with the management of Dean Witter funds.
We can understand why the brokerage is reluctant to talk. One of Dean Witter's top-ten holdings is in Sweden's SinterCast AB—accounting for 1.1% of assets. This company, which analyzes liquid metal, has an accumulated deficit of $36 million. It is considered highly speculative and is also found in Dean Witter's World Wide Investment Trust. Besides Morgan Grenfell, which owns roughly $1 million worth of SinterCast shares, no other fund company owns it, according to Morningstar. SinterCast stock plunged from 370 Swedish kronor to 205 on news of Peter Young's firing, and has declined a further 9%.
Don't be sold funds by load-hungry stockbrokers. Do a little homework and pick your own.
Earlier this year, the top holding in Dean Witter's SmallCap fund was Norway's Oticon Holding, which accounted for 1.2% of the fund's portfolio. It is a hearing aid company with $150 million in sales, and with a 40 P/E multiple.
Oticon has also made its way into Dean Witter's World Wide Investment. The only other funds that own this stock are Morgan Grenfell and an Invesco European fund.
Other holdings common to the Dean Witter and Morgan Grenfell portfolios include Norwegian companies Hitec ASA, an oil-drilling manufacturer; loss-ridden NCL Holding, the parent company of Norwegian Cruise Lines; Nera AS, a telecommunications company trading at 27 times earnings; SensoNor, a manufacturer of electronic air bag sensors which lost $3 million in 1995; and Sysdeco Group AS, a software developer that has seen its stock fall from 210 Norwegian kroner in February to a recent 15.
As for the State Street funds, the biggest Peter Young position is in warrants issued by Emtech Ltd., recently renamed Ashurst Technology. The fund's sixth-largest holding, Bermuda-based Ashurst says it's "an international group engaged in the development and marketing of advanced materials, technologies and business opportunities in Ukraine." In the most recent quarter, Ashurst lost $2 million on revenues of $1.1 million. Former State Street money manager Bamford said he expected the stock was a long-term pick.
What are investors getting for the outsize risks they appear to be taking in these funds? Dean Witter's International SmallCap, born two years ago, has badly lagged both the Morgan Stanley World index and the S&P 500: It lost more than 10% of its value in 1994 and gained only 2.9% the following year. So far this year, it's up a paltry 5.5%. It has a hefty 5% load.
Dean Witter's World Wide Trust has fared a bit better, but its ten-year average lags the Morgan Stanley world index by more than 3%. The fund was up 41% in 1993, then lost 7% in 1994 and gained 4.6% last year. Year-to-date, it's up 7.9%. Load: 5%.
In existence since 1992, State Street Research's International Equity funds have also disappointed. Year-to-date, all classes are down 0.5% to 1.5%. The three-year-average annual return is 6%, according to Morningstar.
How can mutual fund investors avoid this kind of hazard? Take responsibility for your own investments. Don't be sold funds by load-hungry stockbrokers. Do a little homework and pick your own. If you're interested in buying an international fund, stick with a time-tested manager. Three that pass muster with Forbes: the Janus Worldwide fund, the USAA Investment-Cornerstone Strategy and Fidelity Worldwide. forbes.com |