80 Years of Buy-and-Hold

I thought I was strict with my policy of only changing five stocks a year on our Buy List, but the Voya Corporate Leaders Trust Fund hasn’t bought a new stock in 80 years.

Some of its holdings are unchanged, including DuPont, General Electric, Procter & Gamble and Union Pacific. Others were spun off from or acquired from original components, including Berkshire Hathaway (successor to the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway); CBS (acquired by Westinghouse Electric and renamed); and Honeywell (which bought Allied Chemical and Dye). Some are just gone, including the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. and American Can. Twenty-one stocks remain in the fund.

The plan is simple, and the results have been good. Light on banks and heavy on industrials and energy, the fund has beaten 98 percent of its peers, known as large value funds, over both the past five and ten years, according to Morningstar.

“This fund has been around a lot longer than I have, and it’s working,” said Craig Watkins, 29, an investment analyst for Conover Capital Management in Bellevue, Washington. Conover has recommended the Voya fund to 401(k) plans it advises.

Watkins compared the Voya fund’s “deep-value” approach to investor Warren Buffett’s, whose Berkshire Hathaway is the fund’s second-largest holding.

“It’s deep-value in the sense that all the companies in the portfolio have an amazing tenure,” Watkins said. He said the Voya fund’s strategy can be better than an index fund because it doesn’t have to change its weightings when the index changes

Posted by on March 3rd, 2015 at 10:04 am


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