Janus Capital Group Inc. (NYSE: JNS) announced the 10-year anniversary
of Janus Contrarian Fund (JSVAX). The fund has been managed by David
Decker since its February 29, 2000 launch. As of February 28, 2010, a
hypothetical investment of $10,000 invested in Class T Shares of Janus
Contrarian Fund when it was launched would be worth $17,065.22, versus
$9,696.16 for the S&P 500 Index.
Janus Contrarian Fund’s strong results have been driven by Decker’s
philosophy of seeking out-of-favor companies that he believes have
unrecognized value in the marketplace. Decker, who has been with Janus
since 1992, invests in these non-consensus stocks because he is
confident that Janus' research process can uncover opportunities others
may have missed.
"Contrarian investing is only appropriate for investors with a long-term
investment horizon. You have to have the conviction to invest
opportunistically when you find quality companies that are not widely
understood.” said Decker. "Ultimately, the goal is to deliver strong
returns for investors over time. As a significant investor in the fund,
I truly believe we can accomplish this over the long run.”
Janus Contrarian Fund invests across a wide range of market caps,
sectors and countries. As of February 28, 2010, Class T Shares of Janus
Contrarian Fund ranked in the top 10% (76 of 804 funds), 64% (438 of 694
funds), 5% (22 of 530 funds) and 18% (41 of 228 funds) of Lipper
multi-cap core funds on a one-, three-, five-, and 10-year basis,
respectively.
About Janus Capital Group Inc.
Janus Capital Group Inc. (JCG) is a global investment firm offering
strategies from three individual investment boutiques: Janus Capital
Management LLC (Janus), INTECH Investment Management LLC (INTECH) and
Perkins Investment Management LLC (Perkins). Each manager employs a
research intensive approach that is distinct within its respective asset
class. This multi-boutique approach enables the firm to provide
style-specific expertise across an array of strategies, including
growth, value and risk managed equities, fixed income and alternatives
through one common distribution platform.
At the end of December 2009, JCG managed $159.7 billion in assets for
shareholders, clients and institutions around the globe. Based in
Denver, JCG also has offices in London, Milan, Munich, Singapore, Hong
Kong, Tokyo and Melbourne.
Please consider the charges, risks, expenses and investment
objectives carefully before investing. For a prospectus containing this
and other information, please call Janus at 877.33JANUS (52687) or
download the file from janus.com/info. Read it carefully before you
invest or send money.
As of 12/31/09 the average annual returns at net asset value for
Class T shares of Janus Contrarian Fund were 68.64%, -6.13% and 5.49% on
a one-, three-, and 10-year basis respectively. The annual net expense
ratio as of 10/31/09 was 1.07%. Annual expense ratios include dividends
or interest on short sales, which are paid to the lender of borrowed
securities. Such expenses will vary depending on whether the securities
the Fund sells short pay dividends or interest and the amount of such
dividends or interest.
Data presented reflects past performance, which is no guarantee of
future results. Investment results and principal value will fluctuate so
that shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their
original cost. Due to market volatility, current performance may be
higher or lower than the performance shown. Call 877.33JANUS (52687) or
visit janus.com/advisor/mutual-funds for performance current to the most
recent month-end.
Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the Fund’s total
operating expenses allocated to Class T Shares (excluding any
performance adjustments to management fees, administrative fees payable
pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, brokerage commissions,
interest, dividends, taxes, and extraordinary expenses including, but
not limited to, legal claims and liabilities, litigation costs,
indemnification, acquired fund fees and expenses) to certain limits
until at least 2/16/11. Returns shown include fee waivers, if any, and
without such waivers returns would have been lower.
Expense information shown reflects estimated annualized expenses that
the Fund share class expects to incur during their fiscal year.
Contractual waivers agreed to by Janus Capital, where applicable, are
included under "Net Annual Fund Operating Expenses.” (All expenses are
shown without the effect of expense offset arrangements. Pursuant to
such arrangements, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash
balances are used to reduce custodian and transfer agent expenses.)
This Fund has a performance-based management fee that adjusts up or down
based on the Fund’s performance relative to an approved benchmark index
over a performance measurement period. See the Fund’s Prospectus or
Statement of Additional Information for more details.
Returns include reinvestment of dividends and capital gains.
Effective 7/6/09, Janus Adviser Contrarian Fund merged into Janus
Contrarian Fund. Effective 2/16/10, the Fund’s Class J Shares were
renamed Class T Shares.
The hypothetical example of the $10,000 in Janus Contrarian Fund on
inception date does not represent the returns of any particular
investment. Hypothetical returns include reinvestment of dividends and
capital gains.
The Fund’s performance may be affected by risks that include those
associated with nondiversification, non-investment grade debt
securities, undervalued or overlooked companies, investments in specific
industries or countries and potential conflicts of interest with Janus
Smart Portfolios and Janus Modular Portfolio Construction® Fund.
Additional risks to the Fund(s) may include those associated with
investing in foreign securities, emerging markets, initial public
offerings, real estate investment trusts (REITs), derivatives and
companies with relatively small market capitalizations. Please see a
Janus prospectus for more information about risk, Fund holdings and
other details.
Funds that invest in Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) may be
subject to a higher degree of market risk because of concentration in a
specific industry, sector or geographic region. REITs may be subject to
risks including, but not limited to: legal, political, liquidity,
interest rate risks, a decline in the value of real estate, risks
related to economic conditions, changes in the value of the underlying
property owned by the trust and defaults by borrowers.
To the
extent the Funds invest in foreign REITs, the Funds may be subject to
fluctuations in currency rates or political or economic conditions in a
particular country.
The use of short sales may cause the fund to have higher expenses
than those of other equity funds. Short sales are speculative
transactions and involve special risks, including a greater reliance on
the investment team’s ability to accurately anticipate the future value
of a security. The Fund’s losses are potentially unlimited in a short
sale transaction. The Fund’s use of short sales in effect leverages the
Fund’s portfolio. The Fund’s use of leverage may result in risks and can
magnify the effect of any losses. There is no assurance that a
leveraging strategy will be successful.
The Fund may invest in derivatives which can be highly volatile and
involve additional risks than if the underlying securities were held
directly by the Fund. Such risks include gains or losses which, as a
result of leverage, can be substantially greater than the derivatives'
original cost. There is also a possibility that derivatives may not
perform as intended which can reduce opportunity for gain or result in
losses by offsetting positive returns in other securities the Fund owns.
Janus Contrarian Fund held approximately 16.11% of its assets in
Indian securities as of December 31, 2009 and the Fund may have
experienced significant gains or losses due, in part, to its investments
in India. While holdings are subject to change without notice, the
Fund's returns and NAV may be affected to a large degree by fluctuations
in currency exchange rates or political or economic conditions in India.
Lipper rankings are based on total return.
Lipper, a wholly owned subsidiary of Thomson Reuters, provides
independent insight on global collective investments including mutual
funds, retirement funds, hedge funds, fund fees and expenses to the
asset management and media communities. Lipper ranks the performance of
mutual funds within a classification of funds that have similar
investment objectives. Rankings are historical with capital gains and
dividends reinvested and do not include the effect of loads. It may be
based, in part, on the performance of a predecessor fund.
Rankings are for the share class shown only; other classes may have
different performance characteristics.
If an expense waiver was in effect, it may have had a material effect on
the total return or yield, and therefore the ranking for the period.
The S&P 500® Index is a commonly recognized, market capitalization
weighted index of 500 widely held equity securities, designed to measure
broad U.S. equity performance. The Fund's portfolio may differ
significantly from the securities held in the index. The index is
unmanaged and not available for direct investment; therefore its
performance does not reflect the expenses associated with the active
management of an actual portfolio.
Funds distributed by Janus Distributors LLC (03/10)
