Next Gen Investing You could be losing out on 15% of your mutual fund and ETF returns, researchers say—how to keep more of your money Published Mon, Oct 27 20259:00 AM EDT
 
    Ryan Ermey
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  Delmaine Donson | E+ | Getty Images
  To find out how well a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund has performed over a certain period, you typically look at  total return.
  That  number bakes in a few assumptions. Namely, that you put a chunk of  money into the fund and let it sit there the entire time, periodically  reinvesting any dividends that may have come in.
  Of  course, that’s not how real people invest. After you buy a fund, you  might end up adding a few more shares if the fund gets hot. Or maybe you  sell a chunk if you find another investment you like better.
  For  this reason, even if you’ve held a fund for a decade, the 10-year return  you see on your portfolio page is unlikely to match the official return  on the fund’s website. And, on average, investors’ returns are lower  than those of the funds they own.
  Over the 10 years ended December  2024, the average dollar invested in U.S. mutual funds and ETFs  returned an annualized 7%, according to Morningstar’s 2025 “ Mind the Gap” study. Over the same period, those funds returned 8.2%, on average.
  Put another way, over the course of the decade researchers analyzed, investors lost out on about 15% of their returns.
  That  1.2 percentage-point difference is what Morningstar researchers call  the “investor return gap.” In general, it can be attributed to investor  behavior, says Jeffrey Ptak, managing director for Morningstar Research  Services.
  “Literally, it would be buying high and selling low,” Ptak says.
  How to narrow your performance gap The  most obvious examples of self-destructive behavior from investors come  during market extremes, Ptak says, with over-exuberant investors piling  into the market when stocks have already shot up and panic-selling when  the market hits the skids.
  But the kind of behavior that leads to  long-term underperformance “could be much more mundane than that,” he  says. It just may be a coincidence of timing that you buy a fund before a  few of its holdings decline in value. Or maybe you sell to raise money  for something else, and the fund takes off.
  Morningstar’s data  isn’t a perfect roadmap for maximizing returns from the funds you own,  but it does potentially highlight a few possible strategies for keeping  more of the money your funds earn. But remember: Experts recommend  talking with a financial professional before making any major changes to  your investing strategy.
  Avoid taking on too much riskAs  a rule, investments that come with a higher level of risk also offer  higher returns. Among professional investors, this is known as the risk  “premium.”  But if you have a  highly volatile fund in your portfolio, the data shows that you’re less likely to realize that fund’s full potential.
  “More  volatile funds are harder for investors to succeed with than less  volatile funds,” Ptak says. “And that was true even when we were  controlling for fund type.”
  Across all types of mutual funds and  ETFs, investors in the least volatile quintile of funds experienced a  return gap of 0.4%, compared with a 2% gap among the most volatile  funds.
  It’s impossible to draw a precise conclusion as to why that  is, but it’s not hard to believe that financial psychology plays a  role, Ptak says. Theoretically, the jumpier a fund’s performance, the  more tempted an investor might be to panic and sell when things get bad.
  “Somebody  could be following the theory and think, I’ll invest in [riskier  assets] that pay you a premium return,” Ptak says. “That’s all well and  good, but if you can’t hang on, you aren’t going to be getting any sort  of risk premium. On the contrary, you’ll probably have a gap.”
  Invest deliberatelyMorningstar’s  data tends to support the idea that investors who take a hands-off,  buy-and-hold approach generally have a smaller gap than people who trade  more frequently.
  Case in point: Among the different types of funds researchers analyzed, allocation funds — which largely consist of  target-date funds — produced the lowest investor gap on average, just 0.1 percentage point.
  The  reason for the small gap likely comes down to how these funds, which  are designed to grow more conservative as you age, are commonly held: in  long-term retirement accounts.
  The best way to keep your  investing gap narrow, Ptak says, is to invest in a diversified portfolio  and automate your trading as much as you can to avoid discretionary or  emotional trading.
  “Less is more,” he says. “The less transacting you have to do, the better off you’re going to be.”
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