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Finding The Middle Ground

A fair number of market experts will tell you that middle-sized companies offer a unique opportunity under most market conditions. For one, they often go under-appreciated by large brokerage firms until they report dazzling profit news. This means that a well-run mid-cap is often poised for the same potential for large gains that investors find in small companies. Additionally, mid-caps tend to be more established than small-caps, and therefore less likely to undergo extreme volatility when the market drops.

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Compare this year’s results with numbers tainted by the bear market. As of the

end of the third quarter 2003, large corporations tracked by the S&P 500 Index had averaged a 14.7% gain. The S&P SmallCap Index logged a 20.9% gain over the same nine months, and the S&P MidCap benchmark wasn’t far behind with a 19.8% tally. Over the last three years through Oct. 6, including the bear market, large-cap shares retreated an average 9.46% annually, mid-caps slid 6.49%, and small-caps averaged an annual gain of 1.35%.

As you look at opportunities for this year, you may want to hedge your bets with a mid-cap blend fund, a category that the mutual fund research company Morningstar says incorporates a mix of growth and value investing styles. As of Oct. 10, 2003, mid-cap blends were up 26%, thanks in part to a strong rally by technology stocks. Morningstar analyst Dan McNeela says, “Coming into a rally, smaller-cap stocks tend to do well. But the best reason to get interested in [mid-cap blend funds], however, is [because it’s] a way to diversify a large-cap-heavy portfolio.”

We screened Morningstar’s database looking for portfolios with the strongest record over the last three years, an indication of

how well a fund can perform under rough market conditions. The fund that finished atop our list was the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, which provided investors a 19.7% average annual return over the three-year period ending Oct. 6, 2003. The fund’s management often applies hedge-fund strategies to investing and have taken sizeable stakes in healthcare and consumer companies. As of this writing, the Hussman fund carried a five-star rating from Morningstar, but the portfolio’s expense ratio was a high 1.99%, and its turnover rate was 199%.

The Ariel Appreciation Fund also makes our list. Managed by John Rogers, the Ariel fund boasts a five-star ranking and has had a 12.2% average annual total return over the last three years. Over time, Rogers has aimed to snatch up stocks selling at 40% or more to his calculation of their company’s value. His portfolio tends to stock up on financial and consumer companies while carrying a light weighting in technology shares. The Ariel fund posted an impressive 22.4% return for the first nine months of 2003. The fund has a 13% turnover rate and an expense ratio of 1.26%.

Top Mid-Cap Blend Funds

Fund Name (Ticker) 1-Year Ann.
Total Return*
3-Year Ann.
Total Return*
5-Year Ann.
Total Return*
Toll-Free
Number
Minimum
Initial Investment
Hussman Strategic Growth (HSGFX) 15.85% 19.73% N/A 800-487-7626 valign=”middle”>$1,000
Icon Leisure & Consumer Staples (ICLEX) 20.65 13.46 11.83 800-764-0442 1,000
Eagle Growth (EGRWX) 24.33 13.23 10.38 800-749-9933 500
Kinetics Paradigm (WWNPX) 38.08 13.08 N/A 800-930-3828 2,500
IMS Capital Value (IMSCX) 58.49 12.70 16.13 800-934-5550 5,000
FMI Common Stock (FMIMX) 26.16 12.32 14.96 800-811-5311 1,000
Ariel Appreciation (CAAPX) 34.18 12.24 13.42 800-292-7435 1,000
*AS OF OCTOBER 6, 2003. SOURCE: MORNINGSTAR INC.
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