Saya ada nih beberapa, mungkin bisa membantu. dapet dari mbah google. Ada yang 
artikel, ada juga yang bentuk gambar dari korannya langsung.






 
  
  The Predictive Performance of Morningstar’s Mutual Fund
  Ratings 

  Authors: Roman Kräussl, Ralph Sandelowsky

  Source: Working Paper, Faculty of Economic Sciences and Business
  Administration

  Date: January 2007
  
 


 

In
this article, Kräussl and Sandelowsky take into account successive improvements
in Morningstar’s fund ratings—originally established in 1985—in order to
investigate the predictive performance ability of these ratings. Initially,
funds were rated within broad asset classes. In July 2002, Morningstar changed
the risk-adjusted return measure used to evaluate fund performance. Since then,
they have also been rating funds within 64 narrower fund categories. 



It
appears that many investors base their choice of funds on the fund’s previous
rating. For example, Del Guercio and Tkac (2001) identify a positive abnormal
flow for five-star funds up to six months after the issuance of the initial
five-star rating, while two-star funds experience a negative abnormal flow for
three months after the fund receives its two-star rating, a finding confirming
the influence of ratings on investor behaviour. Whether or not these ratings
exhibit persistence is thus an interesting question.


Several
studies have focused on the subject of Morningstar rating persistence, all of
them having considered only US equity funds. Most of them were based on
Morningstar’s initial methodology. Khorana and Nelling (1998) find that
performance is persistent in the short-term. Blake and Morey (2000) find that
Morningstar’s rating system is mediocre in terms of predicting future
performance, while the Sharpe ratio does considerably better, with a higher
ability to predict low-performing funds than high-performing funds. Morey
(2003) finds that a 5-star Morningstar rating does not persist three years
out-of-sample.


In
the present article, the authors recommend considering old- as well as
new-methodology ratings--with a period of study extending from March 1995 to
September 2005--and including not only U.S. equity funds, but also
international equity funds, taxable bond funds and municipal bond funds, the
three latter categories not having been studied previously.


First,
they analyse the predictive performance of Morningstar’s rating system
considering all mutual funds as a single group and using 1995 ratings.
According to their results, there is hardly any difference in performance
between three-star and five-star rated funds and several four-star rated funds
post significantly higher returns than do some five-star rated funds. However,
Morningstar’s ratings system is excellent at predicting underperformance. These
findings are consistent with those of Blake and Morey (2000).


Secondly—with
data from 1997 onwards--they consider four broad asset categories for their
analysis of the ratings. They find, for example, that five-star US equity funds
significantly outperform one-star funds only 37.5% of the time; at the same
time, these same funds significantly outperform three star-funds 18.75% of the
time. It is clear then that—compared to a random walk--Morningstar’s ratings
system offers no added value in terms of predicting mutual fund returns. It is
not even able to predict underperformance when funds are classified in the
various categories. 

For international stocks, the results are slightly better
than those for U.S.
equity funds, but the rating system still does not beat a random walk, as in
43.75% of the cases there is no significant difference between the performances
of five- and three-star rated funds. For taxable bond funds, the predictive
performance based upon Morningstar’s rating is extremely weak and will never
exceed the returns yielded by a random walk. Lastly, the performance of all
municipal bond funds appears alike, making no sense for the division into the
five start groups. 



Finally,
Kräussl and Sandelowsky consider the recent period, starting in July 2002,
during which funds are divided into 64 categories. For the categories related
to U.S. stocks, they found that for 85.29% of funds there is no difference in
the performance of one- and five-star rated funds, or that one-star funds
significantly outperform five-star funds after one year. Concerning
international stock funds, the predictive performance of the rating is good
only for the Europe stock category.
Morningstar ratings are also good at predicting fund performance in the taxable
bond classifications of Intermediate Government, Intermediate-Term Bond,
Multisector Bond and International Bond. For municipal bonds, predictive
ability is found only in Muni Short and Muni Single State Intermediate
categories.


Comparing
new and old ratings on the same out-of sample-period, the authors of the study
find that—in terms of predictive performance--the new ratings system is, at
best, equal to the old one. In most cases, the results produced by the old
ratings system are more significant than those produced by the new ratings
system. They find that the old ratings system is superior in predicting
short-term performance, while both systems are about equal in predicting
longer-term performance.


They
conclude that the new ratings system should be used as a source of investment
decisions only for the few categories for which it has been identified as
having predictive ability, and not for all other categories, for which it does
not offer any value in terms of predicting future performance; in short, their
conclusions support Morningstar’s assertions that its ratings are indicative of
past performance alone.


References

Blake,
C.R., and M.R. Morey, “Morningstar Ratings and Mutual Fund Performance”,
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, vol. 35, n°3, 2000, p. 451-483.

Del
Guercio, D. and P.A. Tkac, “Star Power: The Effect of Morningstar Ratings on
Mutual Fund Flows”, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Working Paper 2001-15, 
2001.

Khorana,
A. and E. Nelling, “The Determinants and
Predictive Ability of Mutual Funds Ratings”, Journal of Investing, vol. 7, n°3,
1998, p. 61-66. 



--- Pada Sel, 27/7/10, rahmatina kasri <[email protected]> menulis:

Dari: rahmatina kasri <[email protected]>
Judul: RE: [ekonomi-syariah] Tolong ada yang punya jurnal ini
Kepada: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Tanggal: Selasa, 27 Juli, 2010, 10:01 AM







 



  


    
      
      
      


Boleh tahu nama jurnal dan volume terbitnya...Siapa tahu saya bisa membantu...
Rahma

To: ekonomi-syariah@ yahoogroups. com
From: uma...@yahoo. co.uk
Date: Fri, 23 Jul 2010 12:06:45 +0000
Subject: [ekonomi-syariah] Tolong ada yang punya jurnal ini


















 



  


    
      
      
      
Askm wr wb

Afwan jika merepotkan, mohon bantuan jika ada yang punya jurnal The 
determinants and predictive ability of mutual fund ratings

ada teman sekelas yang butuh.....saya dah cari kemana mana (dunia maya 
maksudnya),, ,ndak dapat...kasihan dia sudah hampir mau putus asa...he he he

Kalau ada yang punya ya....tolong

Jazklh
Waskm wr wb 

Shoi






      


    
     

    
    






                                          
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