Thank you for the well-thought and excellent response.

Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
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Not necessarily. Looking at a few of the funds we use,
- HRSCX, Eagle Small Cap Growth Fund Class A, is SC Growth. (Ignore the A class, as we do not impose loads.)
- VHDYX, Vanguard High Dividend Yield Index Fund, is LC Value.
- FSCRX, Fidelity Small Cap Discovery Fund, is SC Blend – tilted toward Value but with Growth stocks in the mix, also.
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I am surprised to learn that you use actively managed funds for client accounts. May I inquire as to what is your rationale? I also do, for a small portion of my portfolio, but this approach is very unpopular in this neck of the woods.
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Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
Click to expand…
Not necessarily. Looking at a few of the funds we use,
- HRSCX, Eagle Small Cap Growth Fund Class A, is SC Growth. (Ignore the A class, as we do not impose loads.)
- VHDYX, Vanguard High Dividend Yield Index Fund, is LC Value.
- FSCRX, Fidelity Small Cap Discovery Fund, is SC Blend – tilted toward Value but with Growth stocks in the mix, also.
Click to expand...
Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
Depends on the fund. Some tilt toward growth, some toward value, and some are a blend of both.
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So looking at the Schwab small-cap ETF (SCHA), it’s a blend. Expense ratio is great at 0.05%. Would I really gain that much by subdividing this into small cap value (SLYV, which is SPDR S&P 600 Small Cap Value ETF, 0.15%) and small cap growth (SLYG, which is SPDR® S&P 600 Small Cap Growth ETF, 0.15%)?
The small cap value and growth are higher expense ratio and at Schwab are not comission-free, which I think would be the main problem and why I’m leaning to just keeping small cap core.
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Its questionable in the first place whether tilting to something like small cap, which everyone knows and does it seems, ever actually worked in the first place. There were a ton of definition changes and index mergers over the last 100 years that resulted in quite the on paper out performance of this asset class that is nearly totally attributable to these changes and not some premium. Any actual premium is not in small cap, but in value as later research has shown it to be.
I think all the over slicing isnt worthwhile at all unless you tacitly admit to yourself you will be doing some sort of explicit timing, that is you will buy reits when they have been getting crushed for a while, EM, international all based on some sort of relative value. Otherwise probably a similar return, much simpler to just have a total, international, and some bond fund.
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Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
Depends on the fund. Some tilt toward growth, some toward value, and some are a blend of both.
Click to expand…
So looking at the Schwab small-cap ETF (SCHA), it’s a blend. Expense ratio is great at 0.05%. Would I really gain that much by subdividing this into small cap value (SLYV, which is SPDR S&P 600 Small Cap Value ETF, 0.15%) and small cap growth (SLYG, which is SPDR® S&P 600 Small Cap Growth ETF, 0.15%)?
The small cap value and growth are higher expense ratio and at Schwab are not comission-free, which I think would be the main problem and why I’m leaning to just keeping small cap core.
Click to expand...
Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
Depends on the fund. Some tilt toward growth, some toward value, and some are a blend of both.
Click to expand...
Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
Click to expand...
Aren’t large-cap and small-cap funds already part growth and part value? Or am I mistaken?
I’m about to start my first attending job, and I’m working on my asset allocation. I’m 31 and expect to go half time around age 55 and retire at 60. Would like to have about $4mill in the bank at age 60. I’ll be using a Schwab account for my Roth, 401k and 457b governmental, while at the government job and eventually just have my solo 401k and a taxable account. Expense ratios are in brackets. My thoughts are:
90% stocks, 10% bonds and cash
Stocks:
60% US: 30% large cap (SCHX, 0.03%), 30% small cap (SCHA, 0.05%)
20% International: 15% international (SCHF, 0.06%), 5% emerging markets (SCHE, 0.13%)
10% REIT (SCHH, 0.07%)
Am I tilting too much towards small cap? Should I just leave the 60% stocks in a total stock market index fund and be done with it?
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Your equity allocation is close to what we use (although 100% overall). I would further divide the LC and the SC into 50% growth and 50% value. If you use a blended fund, you’re going to end up with more bonds. Be sure to rebalance back to beginning parity annually (at about the same time of year).
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