What a year! As I flit about at home, scooting between this and that, upending things as I do, I like to reflect. Hindsight (though I declare to my clients never to indulge in it), sneaks up on me. So, let's cut to the part where we dutifully adhere to that well-worn disclaimer: past returns are no indicator of future performance. That's what they say so it must be true, right?
That is what the small print burbles on every fund document and prospectus in the land. Shame it's not true. Mostly.
That line, that you can't judge a book by its cover or an investment by the trail it leaves behind, is rubbish. You totally can and you should. The investment people sometimes put that badge on things as a bit of a cop out, frankly.
When I see it, it says to me -- "We absolve our responsibility if this thing performs poorly". Predictably, I am referring more to active fund managers who tote their skills as market beaters, rather than the trundling index ETF. Of course they have to label things, just like in the supermarket, or people will complain when things go bad.
But this is not like buying a leg of lamb and being able to determine the fat content, this is your money. And the disclaimer especially gets a lot of prominence when the investment is chasing masses of something called alpha.