Quick Take: With a handful of exceptions, the companies owned by RS Investment Trust:MidCap Opportunities (RSMOX) are profitable, say John Wallace and Jay Sherwood, who oversee the portfolio. However, the managers are not opposed to investing in a business that's in the red if they see it on the cusp of moving into the black.
Their willingness to buy stocks others don't see as growth-oriented investments sets them apart from other money managers who hunt for growing companies, Sherwood says. The two managers scan for mid-sized firms that consistently increase earnings and sales. They look to scoop up shares that appear attractively priced compared to their history and the overall market.
The pair guided the $584-million fund to a return of 12.4% last year. That kept it within walking distance of the average mid-cap growth fund, which was up 12.8%. The fund has topped its peers over longer periods. For the three years ended January 31, it registerd an annualized return of 7.6%, versus a gain of 3.8% for its peers. Over the five years, it edged up 0.02%, versus a loss of 2.3% for similar funds.
Wallace is also the lead manager of the RS Investment Trust:Growth Fund (RSVPX), which he runs with Sherwood. In addition, Wallace, a former Oppenheimer Funds portfolio manager, helps pilot RS Investment Trust:Diversified Growth (RSDGX). Though the fund's investment advisor recently settled charges with the SEC that it allowed rapid-fire trading, RS MidCap Opportunities fund was not implicated in the scandal.
The Full Interview:
Because of their bias towards growth, you would expect John Wallace and Jay Sherwood to look for companies whose top and bottom lines are expanding.
Most of the time the two stock pickers, who run the RS Mid-Cap Opportunities Fund, do just that. But not always.
"We may own some names that the typical growth fund manager wouldn't own," Sherwood said. "John and I look at things a little bit differently than, maybe, the traditional growth manager, which we think actually gives us a bit of an advantage."
Wallace and Sherwood explain that they're willing to bet on companies that aren't earning money if they think that situation is about to change.
Take Gemstar-TV Guide Intl (GMST), for instance. The television listing company, one of the fund's top stocks, isn't profitable now, but it's generating cash, Sherwood said. He expects its revenue to increase "quite dramatically" as more companies use Gemstar's service to advertise. Given Gemstar's leading position in its field, "it's only a matter of time" before it starts generating "a lot" in earnings, he added.
Wallace believes that Gemstar's stock, which has been trading for around $5.50 lately, can reach $8-$11 within the next one to three years.