What Is a Lipper Average, and Why Should We Care?

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In every financial magazine I read, I see companies bragging about how their funds constantly beat their five-year Lipper averages.

That sounds awesome, right? Not necessarily, once we dig in to exactly what Lipper averages are and how impressive it is to be above the average.

What Is a Lipper Average?

Lipper is a company (owned by Reuters) that supplies mutual fund information along with commentary and tools about mutual funds. Lipper takes the results of actively managed funds and averages them as groups. They are broken out by fund categories (for example: large cap growth, small cap value), so it's easy to compare mutual funds within a category. (See also: Mutual Funds for Wise Bloggers)

What Is Included, and What Is Not?

The Lipper averages only include actively managed funds. They do not take into account the benchmarks or indices (for example, the S&P 500). The difference between actively managed funds and the indices is that there are overhead costs for actively managed funds, and lots of research goes into which stocks are chosen. In comparison, index funds have low overhead costs and typically include very low fees.

What Are Some Issues With the Lipper Average?

The Lipper average only takes into account funds that currently exist. If in 2008 a fund performed above the Lipper average for its category but for some reason isn't offered anymore, the Lipper average is retroactively adjusted to reflect only funds that are still in existence.

Also, it's important to keep in mind that sometimes being above-average still isn't impressive. If all mutual funds in a category lose 20% in a year, "only" losing 10% could be considered great! However, if the benchmark only lost 5%, these rankings could be misleading. Investors may think that they're looking at a fantastic mutual fund when really they could do better simply investing in low-cost index funds.

So Where Should You Invest?

While doing better than your peers is certainly a good thing, there are often better investments we can make, and that is certainly the case here. How do we know? Well, according to Standard and Poor's Indices Versus Active Funds Scorecard (PDF), most actively managed funds fail to beat their benchmarks. For example, all Large Cap Funds failed to beat the S&P 500 benchmark over 65% of the time in 2010, over 57% of the time in the past three years, and over 61% of the time over the past five years. Suddenly, being average isn't quite as impressive.

The Lipper average can be a good indicator if you're set on an actively managed fund and you're trying to determine where to put your money. While past results aren't always indicators of future success, I'd rather put my money in an investment that has done well over the past five years than one that has underperformed.

However, in most cases, the fees we pay to those who manage these funds outweigh the superior performance we hope to get when comparing them to passively managed index funds, which usually have very low fees.

Do you think beating the Lipper average is impressive? Or is it just a way to spin a statistic to attract customers?

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Meg Favreau's picture

I'd also be curious to hear from readers who are currently looking for mutual funds to invest in or have looked in the past -- what has influenced your decisions?

Guest's picture
Guest

I have read many articles that have a similar opinion. I do own a few index funds but they have not performed as well as my actively managed funds in the last few years. Your explanation is good except I thought it was a little biased. Everything comes with a cost. I evaluate those costs in a simple way, do I feel that the value I receive from my investment, outweighs the cost. When I compared my index funds to actively managed, it was easy to see why my actively managed did better recently. An index only owns those companies that are in that index. My managed fund may be most closely compared to say the S& however, depending on the operating rules of the fund they may be able to buy other investments that an index cannot. For example, one fund has the ability to put a small percentage of their assets into alternative investments. The fund I'm referring to has been my best performer, outperforming all of my index and other funds. My advisor told me when I purchased this fund that if it's benchmark goes up, this fund should go up by more. He also warned that if we have losses, this fund will probably lose more than its benchmark. I was okay with the additional risk and so far it has done exactly what it's supposed to. My belief is that most people should own a little of everything. I have one advisor who always explains fees and costs very clearly to me. In the last 20 years he has purchased for me all of the following: actively managed funds, index funds, stocks, bonds, CDs, ETFs, fixed and variable annuities, term life, whole life, REITs and he has even referred me to the person who sold me car and home insurance. I did enjoy reading some of the points you made, I just beleive that there's no one right answer for everybody. Thank you.