Morningstar Investment Research Center by Susan Dziubinski Vol. 8 Issue 5 Apr 14, 2009
What's New
It's Not April Fools--Morningstar Investment Research Center Now Includes Exporting

We're pleased to announce that users can now export data from Morningstar Investment Research Center. Specifically, users can export 10-year financial statements and price histories via the Export to Excel links that appear on the stock data pages.

A number of clients have asked for this enhancement, and we're certain it will increase the database's value to your patrons, students, and colleagues.

Also Just Added--Updated Ibbotson SBBI Highlights
Last year we added valuable Ibbotson content to our database: asset-allocation and index data from the past year and decade. Each spring as the new content is published in the Ibbotson SBBI Classic Edition Yearbook, we update the data on Morningstar Investment Research Center.

The new data and market recap are now available. To view the report, visit the Industries page of the database and click 1998-2008, located on the left side of the page under Ibbotson.

Back to Top of Page
Contents
What's New
It's Not April Fools--Morningstar Investment Research Center Now Includes Exporting
Marketing for Libraries
Library TV
Investing Tip of the Month
Four Ways to Prepare for the Rebound, by Gregg Wolper, Senior Mutual Fund Analyst
Training Corner
by Lars Wasvick
What Is the Exporting Thing?
Marketing for Libraries
Library TV

Public access television has been around since the 1970s. Since then, thousands of towns and regions have created local cable access to community information, local government forums, and regional entertainment. In Mount Prospect, Illinois, library happenings are featured in a local cable access program, the award-winning "Library Life."

Host Cathy Cushing is the producer, writer, and editor of "Library Life." Cushing brings experience as a television reporter and host of financial, travel, and family-friendly talk shows. Clearly, her experience shows, as for the third consecutive year, "Library Life" has been awarded the prestigious Telly Award, which honors outstanding local, regional, and cable TV programs.

Each episode of "Library Life" has three feature segments and a studio interview. In the March 2009 edition, Cushing welcomed Morningstar to be part of her program. Mount Prospect Public Library is a subscriber to Morningstar Investment Research Center, and the interview was a chance to discuss the library's upcoming MoneySmart Week, which is a week of programs for patrons focusing on various financial topics.

The March 2009 episode can be found on Mount Prospect Public Library's Web site. There is also an archive with previous episodes. For any library looking for a new method of connecting with patrons, checking into public access television should be considered: It's a way to connect with members of your community that may not see your other efforts

Visit our Client Site for posters, table tents, training announcements, and more.

If you would like additional marketing ideas or material to help promote Morningstar Investment Research Center at your library, please do not hesitate to contact us at libraryservices@morningstar.com.

 

Back to Top of Page
New Clients

In March, we welcomed these new Morningstar Investment Research Center clients:

East Baton Rouge Parish Library, Baton Rouge, LA


Westfield Washington Public Library, Westfield, IN

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Washington, D.C.

Sun Prairie Public Library, Sun Prairie, WI

 

Find us on Facebook.

Follow us on Twitter.

 

Client Site
Visit it regularly to track usage and see what new training and information downloads are available.

Investing Tip of the Month
Four Ways to Prepare for the Rebound, by Gregg Wolper, Senior Mutual Fund Analyst

Things do look dire, but it's possible that the world might not end tomorrow.

It's hard to think about the good times to come when the stock market is getting pounded day after day. But a savvy investor knows that overestimating the permanence of today's conditions is a dangerous habit. Such reminders typically come when markets are climbing, but the concept is equally important when the atmosphere is dismal.

At some point, the stock market will stage a steady recovery. That could be a long way away; it might arrive sooner than anyone thinks. But a nice, sustained rally is almost certain to come along. That's not just my opinion--you agree! At least those of you who have more than a pittance invested in stocks or stock funds--if you didn't agree, you wouldn't own them, right?

With that in mind, it makes sense to prepare your portfolio accordingly. For a variety of reasons, there's a good chance that your current positioning isn't where you'd want it to be if (I mean, when) the market recovers. Maybe your allocations got out of whack because stocks collapsed; perhaps you've sold holdings to take tax losses and haven't replaced them; maybe you were lucky enough to own stock in Wal-Mart and its stellar performance during the crash has made its weight in your portfolio much, much larger than it used to be.

You don't necessarily have to return your portfolio to its pre-crash allocations or own the same funds that you did then. Nor do you have to jump in immediately: Encouraging mindless optimism is not the aim here. Rather, the point is this: At a time when our personal investments are the last things that we want to think about, it's critical to force yourself to look them over. Think about what you want your overall portfolio to look like for the long term and remember that that long term will probably include a recovery in the stock market. Then see how closely your current holdings resemble the framework you have in mind.

Now's the time to make sure that your funds have the policies you want. When the market rebounds, funds with cash are quite likely to lag. You have to be comfortable with that being the trade-off for protection during declines. If your fund companies' documents don't provide clear explanations of their policies in that regard, call them up and ask specifically how much cash the manager is allowed to own and what the levels have typically been over time. (In many cases the formal limit listed in the prospectus might be fairly high but, in practice, the fund almost always remains almost fully invested.)

The Stronger Stuff
At a time when the S&P 500 has lost more than half its value, it's hard to believe that the index has been an outperformer. But small caps and emerging markets have been battered even worse than the big stocks in the United States and Europe. If you didn't have much exposure to either emerging markets or small caps during this crash, be thankful (though owning them for the five years prior to 2008, when both of those areas outperformed, would have been nice).

However, it's important to think ahead. If you want exposure to emerging markets and small stocks when times improve, you may have to take action. That doesn't mean that you must buy a separate fund for each. Most, but not all, broad international funds have some emerging-markets stocks. Meanwhile, small-cap exposure is less common in most core stock funds, so an all-cap stock fund or dedicated small-cap fund might be needed if you want such exposure.

To be clear, you don't absolutely have to own emerging markets or small caps. But it is essential to know what you want and know what you own.

Time-Horizon Guidelines Are No Joke
Sadly, many people have found out too late the importance of the guideline that stocks, and stock funds, are suitable only for money that they won't need for many years. No one knows exactly how long a time horizon must be to make stocks the right vehicle. But we can be certain that it's extremely risky to put money into stock funds that you know you'll need in a year or two.

So, check your timetables again. Decide how much money you'll need in which time frame, and allocate it accordingly. Of course, stocks could zoom over the next 12 or 24 months, but the chances are too great that they'll decline, resulting in less money in your account than you need for a critical expenditure.

The Good News
Here's a comforting finale: You don't have to be too concerned about the precise numbers.

The fact is it's incredibly hard to maintain precise weightings. Your overall foreign-stock allocation doesn't depend solely on the money in your foreign-stock funds, it's also subject to the whims of domestic-stock fund managers who are adding or subtracting Nestle or Toyota Motor or Nokia. The emerging-markets allocation can similarly vary by a few percentage points, or more, based on a variety of factors, including currency swings, broad-fund managers trading in and out of emerging-markets stocks, or such stocks vastly out- or underperforming others.

Don't worry. There's no telling if your target was exactly right in the first place, so it's not a crisis if your portfolio's allocation levels move a few percentage points off the mark.

The most important thing is to avoid the temptation to simply throw your unopened investment statements into the fireplace. Know what's going on in your portfolio. Give it a structure that you're comfortable with. That approach is likely to be helpful whether the stock-market recovery arrives very soon or is still far, far away.

A version of this article appeared in a Morningstar.com Fund Spy, on March 10, 2009.

Back to Top of Page

The Training Corner | by Lars Wasvick, Associate Product Manager
What Is the Exporting Thing?

Client feedback is something very important to us at Morningstar. In our most recent survey, many clients told us that Morningstar Investment Research Center should consider exporting capabilities. After months of development, you can now export stock price history and historical financial statements.

So where is it?

As excited as we are to have this capability, exporting is not one of those features that jumps out at you from our home page. However, I promise it is in there, so if you haven't found it yet, just read along.

All stock pages have the same format. Running down the left side of the page you will see a number of different tabs. If you click on Financial Statements you will see a new set of tabs and 10-years' worth of numbers. Scroll down to the bottom right corner and you will see a prompt, Export to Excel. Simply click and you've got a 10-year Income Statement. Just follow suit for Cash Flows and Balance Sheet to get your data.

Now for daily price history you will want to click on Dividends & Returns tab on the left side of the page. In about the middle of the next page there is a heading Price/Dividends/Splits and just beneath that is the price history. Slide over to the right and you will see five years listed. Click on a year to get the closing price for each trading day of that year. Right at the top you will find the Export to Excel tab. Click there and you will get the designated year in an Excel spreadsheet.

To save you cumbersome cutting and pasting, you can also get five years of price history together. You will find that option back at the Dividends & Returns page. At the far right of the price history section you will find the prompt. Click that and you will get each closing price for the past five years.

As happy as we are to bring you exporting, we realize there may be other portions of the database where you may want that capability as well. So, please pass along any suggestions that will help us serve you and your patrons better.

I will be demonstrating export functionality along with many other features during the Patron Training Session. The virtual session is on Wednesday, April 29, at 3:00pm Central Time. It can be accessed at any location with phone and Internet access. To register, simply e-mail librarytraining@morningstar.com.

 

Back to Top of Page
Contact Us

866-215-2509 (toll-free)
E-mail