I had really taken note of what you said, Greg about mutual funds and why you don't see them as a good choice over simply choosing the "best of breed" stocks.
So I looked at the mutual funds that I was in...funds that Schwab recommended as "diversified portfolio quick picks" a couple years ago. I had 8 funds, and when I plot them on a 10 year comparison vs. the Dow, you can see that all of them were within a few % of each other of the long term.
Some are slightly up, some are slightly down, but I can see that with these large funds, you can never break away from what the Dow is doing for you...not putting my money to work the way it could be.
I'm starting to be a believer that mutual funds can really hold back growth potential. Like Greg is saying, funds have the best of breed stocks in them...and that's what you see sprinkled among the Top 10 or 25 holdings; but those funds are bloated with hundreds of other companies that drag it down, averaging out the gains.
I used to think of investing mutual funds as less risky than buying individual stocks....now I think a good argument can be made for greater risk in mutual funds over simply going with fifteen or twenty of these "steady eddies." It is pretty easy to see that the "best of breed" stocks will beat the Dow over the long haul.
To walk the walk, I sold much of the diversity of my funds and consolidated down to a couple of funds that I liked. And I used the money to double down on my "best of breed" stocks; the Lateral-G mutual fund, if you will. (As a thank you, the G can stand for Greg
).
Throwing this out there, I have some money into clothing retail: Guess (GES) and Ralph Lauren (RL). RL has done a lot better then GES for me so far, but I am seeing that with the momentum behind the rising standards of living in China and India, that they will be commanding more luxury goods, among these are clothes. I have some into Starbucks (SBUX) for the same reason.