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I am ostensibly part of the demographic Thrasher Funds is trying to target, and I am NOT impressed. Granted, I'm not representative of most people my age, but a few things turn me off.
(1) Bad site design. If you just compare the Thrasher site to the sites of its holdings (which are supposed to be companies that appeal to Gen X / Y), you'll see that it doesn't even compare. I don't think this will impress a generation raised on the Internet and acutely sensitive to new trends.
(2) Lack of information. Fund information through Yahoo? This seems amateurish. "About Us" page can't be found? That's like having a ? as your Facebook profile photo.
(3) Pink? I guess this is still part of site design. Pink? When did any generation think pink was cool?
I think Thrasher tries too hard, like a 45-year-old who tries to impress his kids by picking up their lingo, or like a middle-aged mom walking around in baby-doll tees and leggings. (Not that I'm criticizing older folk; I'm just saying there's something fake about Thrasher's message.) I feel like its key demographic will either not care about retirement even if it's dressed up as young and hip, or it will see right through Thrasher.
Beyond the high fees, how dumb is it that this fund holds stocks mainly in consumer cyclicals? Way to not diversify.
Low-fee index funds are still "hip" to me. ;)
Then again, maybe I'm in the wrong generation... :)
What you aren't talking about is how the rest of GenX/Y will perceive it. Ellen was right, we love social networking, gimmicky marketing, pink/black colors (yes, Lily, Pink/Purple/black/colors are hugely popular with the skateboarding/tattooed/rocker/emo/gen y crowd). Once they work out the bugs in the website, add more flash features, and start the real marketing, this fund will be bought by young, unfinacially educated Gen X/Yers. It will appeal to them.
Also, you need to consider the fact that if this type of marketing encourages someone to invest for the first time, that is a good thing. Even if it isn't the cheapest alternative out there, just investing at all at a young age is better than not investing. And this first step will likely lead to the person to take the next steps to learn more about investing for the future, which in turn will point them to other investing alternatives.
So no, it isn't a fund for me or anything I would recommend to others, but it is a unique approach to possibly get people interested in investing, which is still better than doing nothing.
If anyone has any questions about our fund or our firm and what we are trying to accomplish, we would be more than happy to have that type of a dialouge. What we are doing right we will continue to do, what we are doing wrong we will continue to improve upon, but the best part is that we are starting a dialouge in this arena where none of the other bigger shops have even ventured and we will never allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good. Before our fund there wasn't even anybody to snipe at for not reaching out the right way. Also, please see our efforts on the educational media front at www.youtube.com/thrashertv. We have no interest in keeping potential investors in the dark. It is always better for people to be more knowledgeble rather than less.
If you agree that young people deserve money management services, then let us all work together to figure out the best way. We have dedicated our persons and our careers towards that end and are happy to share and receive ideas on that front.
Isn't that really the most important thing? If they get started early, they can always move to lower funds later on in life...
Kudos to the fund for encouraging savings rather than spending...
On the flip-side, (and I may be wrong), most of the people who don't invest already still won't invest no matter how cool or intelligent the message is. Many of them can barely get by. Financially savvy (and generally more well-of) Gen X and Gen Y-ers probably have been investing and leverage 401K's from their employers. These don't have minimum requirements for investment amounts either.
It's neat that Khalid Jones posted a comment on here. That's good to do from a marketing standpoint.