FATTX vs HIE Fund Comparison

A comparison between FATTX and HIE based on their expense ratio, growth, holdings and how well they match their benchmark performance.

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Minafi's Take on FATTX vs HIE

Here's an in depth look at the differences between American Funds 2045 Target Date Retirement Fund® Class F-1 ($FATTX) and Miller/Howard High Income Equity ($HIE).

To start off, here's a look at the basics of each fund. Keep an eye on the FI Score. That's a custom score from 0 to 100 that we generate based on how good this fund is for the casual investor. Most investors only need a handful of total funds in their portfolio. The higher the score, the more likely this is one of those few. Score alone isn't enough! Keep reading on to see how different (or perhaps similar) these two funds are.

70% FI Score
  • fattx
  • Mutual Fund
  • Allocation
  • Target-Date

American Funds 2045 Target Date Retirement Fund® Class F-1

Expenses: 0.38% (Better than 1% of similar funds)

This is an OK choice for a Target-Date Allocation fund. See why »

43% FI Score
  • hie
  • Mutual Fund
  • US Stocks
  • Mid-Cap Value

Miller/Howard High Income Equity

Expenses: 2.51% (Better than 0% of similar funds)

This is a bad choice for a Mid-Cap Value US Stocks fund. See why »

Both $FATTX and $HIE are categorized as Mutual Funds. Mutual funds are often offered by 401(k) platforms and are essentially the same as ETFs. Mutual funds are generally offered by an investment platform – Fidelity has Fidelity mutual funds, Vanguard has Vanguard mutual funds. Mutual funds are ideal for retirement investing since you can invest any amount. That allows you to invest every last cent and benefit from the market.

The biggest disadvantage of mutual funds is that you're usually limited to the funds on your investment platform. If you're investing on Fidelity, you'll want to pick Fidelity mutual funds (or any ETF). Same with Vanguard. Some platforms offer mutual funds from other platforms, but they may charge a purchse or redemption fee. I'd recommend using the same platform as your funds – or stick to ETFs.

To learn more about the difference between these two, you can read about the difference between ETFs and Mutual Funds.

When evaluating a fund, the first things I look at are:

  • What it invests in
  • How much it charges in fees
  • How large the fund is

Let's look into these criteria one by one and see if either of these funds stands out.

Fund Holdings Comparison

Minafi's FI Score algorithm takes into account the category and market. The more niche a fund is, the lower the score. This doesn't mean it's a worse fund, but it does mean you should stop and make sure this a fund you need to diversify your portfolio.

FATTX HIE
Market Score 9.3 /10 10.0 /10
Category Score 5.0 /10 5.0 /10
Total 14.3 15.0

A score of 10 means this is a solid market and category that almost every investor will want to have investments in. The lower the score, the more specific the investment. These scores are based on when most investors would add these funds to their portfolio. A score of 10 means that this fund (or one like it) belongs in a three-fund portfolio. The lower the score, the farther down in your portfolio a fund would go.

Winner: $HIE

Fee Comparison

Fees are one of the biggest killers of portfolio growth. The difference between a 2% fee and a 0.04% fee over 30 years can result in your portfolio having half the total value!

If you're just getting started investing and learning how fees impact your portfolio, I'd encourage you to read through my free investment course (specifically '2.2 - All About Fees') where I go over all the different types of fees you can be charged and how to lower them.

For these two funds, FATTX has an expense ratio of 0.38% while HIE has an expense ratio of 2.51%.

Winner: $FATTX

Fund Size Comparison

Both FATTX and HIE have a similar number of assets under management. FATTX has 14.4 Billion in assets under management, while HIE has .

Minafi categorizes both of these funds as large funds. Fund size is a good indication of how many other investors trust this fund. A large fund by itself doesn't mean it's a good fund, but it is one thing to consider when figuring out how to choose the right fund.

Winner: tie

Which Should You Choose? FATTX or HIE?

Comparing these two funds isn't an apples to apples comparison. FATTX is a Allocation Target-Date fund, while HIE is a US Stocks Mid-Cap Value fund.

If you're aiming to build a diversified, low-fee, tax-optimized portfolio you likely won't be choosing between these two funds since they're different enough.

Running both of these funds through Minafi's FI Score algorithm, gives FATTX a score of 70 and HIE a score of 43.

Winner: Neither, I'd research more funds if you're looking to invest for retirement.

$FATTX

American Funds 2045 Target Date Retirement Fund® Class F-1

70

Read More
Ratings
Rating Type Rating
Expense Ratio Score 6 /10
Expense Rating 6 /10
Market Score 9 /10
Category Score 5 /10
Overview
Overview Details
Fund Type Mutual Fund
Inception Date Feb-1-2007
Exchange NMFQS
Expense Ratio 0.380%
Net Assets 14.4 Billion
Yield 0.95%
Holdings
Description Info
Market Allocation
Category Target-Date
Sectors
  • Basic Materials 3.20%
  • Communication Services 10.90%
  • Consumer Cyclical 9.60%
  • Consumer Defensive 7.89%
  • Energy 3.61%
  • Financial Services 12.72%
  • Healthcare 18.28%
  • Industrials 9.39%
  • Real Estate 2.68%
  • Technology 18.49%
  • Utilities 3.22%
Regions
  • Africa/Middle East 0.38%
  • Asia Developed 3.57%
  • Asia Emerging 4.94%
  • Australasia 0.35%
  • Europe Developed 11.59%
  • Europe Emerging 0.41%
  • Japan 3.39%
  • Latin America 1.55%
  • North America 68.62%
  • United Kingdom 5.20%

$HIE

Miller/Howard High Income Equity

43

Read More
Ratings
Rating Type Rating
Expense Ratio Score 0 /10
Expense Rating 0 /10
Market Score 10 /10
Category Score 5 /10
Overview
Overview Details
Fund Type Mutual Fund
Inception Date Nov-25-2014
Exchange NYSE
Expense Ratio 2.510%
Net Assets
Yield 0.00%
Holdings
Description Info
Market US Stocks
Category Mid-Cap Value
Sectors
  • Basic Materials 1.35%
  • Communication Services 11.03%
  • Consumer Cyclical 5.31%
  • Consumer Defensive 8.88%
  • Energy 15.23%
  • Financial Services 21.19%
  • Healthcare 3.28%
  • Industrials 5.08%
  • Real Estate 3.95%
  • Technology 12.85%
  • Utilities 11.86%
Regions
  • Asia Developed 3.52%
  • Europe Developed 2.07%
  • North America 85.06%
  • United Kingdom 9.34%

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