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Mutual Fund Q&A: 
Power of Basics
Author: Ticker Magazine
123jump.com
Last Update: 10:46 AM EDT October 23 2006


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Many fund managers target stable growth but few base their investing on the most stable human needs existing from the beginning of time. Gerald Sparrow, the manager of the Sparrow Growth Fund, invests in companies that serve necessities such as housing, utilities, food, and certain services. Otherwise, the fund is free to invest in any market cap range and any geographic market as long as the stocks satisfy its growth criteria.

 
Q: Could you give us a couple of examples of ideas that became part of your portfolio through that process?

A: I would use First Cash Financial Services as an example because it’s been one of our best performers. We were looking in the specialty finance area on Investors Business Daily, which ranks the industries by 197 different account classifications. At the time, the specialty finance companies were rated low on this scale but according to the SRC charts, they had consistent track record of growing sales and earnings. On a relative valuation basis, the stock was cheap.

We investigated their balance sheet, income statement, position in the marketplace, and management team, which had been in place for over 3 to 5 years. We bought the stock and we haven’t sold it yet. We’ve made over 100% in the last four years.

Hershey, the food group and confectionary business would be another good example. They generate a lot of excess cash, raised their dividend, and ranked at the bottom on Investor’s Business Daily because the confectionary business was hurt by higher energy prices. The cost of sugar was high and delivering the products became expensive. We looked at the income statement, the balance sheet, the cash flow statement, the management team, and the stock price and we liked what we saw.

Q: Would you give us an example of a stock pick that didn’t work out?

A: Wrigley’s would be such an example. Through the same type of analysis we thought that the company was well run, had excess cash flow, strong balance sheet, and consistent track record but it was out of favor at the time. We lost 21% from our highest-price purchase and it’s down 8% from our average cost. But we still own it and we’re adding to the position because it’s a long-term holding. We don’t think that the business will go away or get obsolete. If we like the longterm business model, we just keep buying the stock.

Q: What are the major challenges when managing money in an all-cap strategy? Is it challenging to follow a large number of companies?

A: The challenge in the past was staying in a sector that was underperforming relative to the other groups but we just changed that perspective. In January this year we opened it up to multi-cap global and domestic securities. To me it is more challenging to stay in large-cap growth when large-cap growth is underperforming than to pick a good company. It doesn’t make sense not to be able to buy a company’s stock just because it is smaller.

We only have one fund at Sparrow Capital Management and we want to make money every year, not only when large-caps are in favor. So our fund is for the advisors and planners who want an all-weather fund with consistent track record.

Q: How much international exposure do you have? What portfolio construction rules do you follow?

A: There’s no strict norm but in the past we have averaged around 15%. It’s all based on the opportunities that present themselves. Our mandate is to be a multi-cap, multi-market fund and, theoretically, we could go up to 100% in international stocks. But since we don’t do a lot of trading, the 15% exposure has remained relatively stable.

We have a very low tax profile that’s attractive for anyone who’s on an aftertax basis. Our turnover this year will be approximately 17% and I anticipate that to drop again next year. I have both my personal IRA money and my personal taxable money in the fund so I have the ability to control the capital gains almost to 100%. The only case when I cannot control them is if a liquidating shareholder forced me to sell. The only disadvantage of being in a mutual fund is that you can potentially be forced to make a change based on some other person’s desires.

Q: What are the most important elements of your sell discipline?

A: We sell when the management team is doing things that we don’t believe to be adding shareholder value over the long term. For example, when the management of Central European Distribution, primarily an alcohol dis- tributing company, started to compete in manufacturing, we thought that this didn’t make sense in the long term and we sold that stock. In general, we follow the management, the industry, the business, and we have pretty good judgment of what will add stockholder value over time.

Q: How many stocks do you have in the portfolio?

A: Currently we have 43 positions. It is a concentrated account and our largest position, First Cash Financial Services, represents 4% of the fund. Our second largest holding is United Technologies at 4% of the account. The next largest holdings are Occidental Petroleum at 3.3% and Commerce Bancorp at 3.2%.

Q: What kind of risks do you perceive and how do you monitor them?

A: The risks come in different flavors. The stock market risk is not really controllable because once you’re in the stock, if the market drops, you will go down with it. But you can use that to your advantage by knowing the trading patterns and anticipating the weak periods to buy your favorite stocks. The second type of risk is industry-specific risk. For example, the housing market right now is weak and we buy stocks that we like for the long term in the periods when they are trading down.

The third risk is company-specific risk and we try to minimize that by buying companies with strong balance sheets, free cash flows, successful management teams, and shareholder-friendly board of directors that you can trust. So we minimize the overall risk by looking at all three factors - market, industry, and stock and company risk - and also by diversifying the portfolio into 40 different holdings.

Q: You mentioned that you own bonds in the fund. How do you select them?
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