By David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The best performing technology fund since the peak of the dot com boom did it all without owning APPLE (AAPL.NQ)Inc
The $941 million Fidelity Select IT Services fund
"This is a fund that doesn't have Google, doesn't have Microsoft. This is a wholly different subset of technology than most investors are familiar with," said Todd Rosenbluth, director of mutual fund research at SP Capital IQ.
The fund invests at least 80 percent of its assets in firms that provide day-to-day services such as payment processing and web hosting, rather than looking for those with zooming growth, said Kyle Weaver, 38, who has been lead portfolio manager of the fund since 2009. The fund has largely kept the same investment approach since its inception, he said.
"We're looking for companies that have a high degree of recurring revenue that aren't very glamorous and operate in the background of our lives instead of front and center," he said.
Instead of Apple and other big household names of the Nasdaq, Weaver owns large positions in companies that few lay investors have heard of, such as Vantiv Inc
Still, the size of the bets the fund takes on companies may give investors pause, Rosenbluth said.
"This is a very concentrated fund and while it has companies like IBM that people have heard of, it has a mixture of small and mid cap companies that will fly below the radar for most investors," he said. The fund charges 83 cents per $100 invested, a level that Morningstar considers below average.
BETTING ON PAYMENTS
Its top holdings are Visa Inc
These "names we know but don't always associate with technology" have "been on a tear over the past three years," said Jeff Tjornehoj, head of Americas Research at Lipper.
Outside of its bets on Visa and Mastercard, the fund has profited more from its positions in medium and small-sized companies than from the large companies it holds. International Business Machines
Weaver splits his portfolio roughly evenly between large and small companies. He recently added to positions in Vantiv Inc
These companies that operate in the background tend to have more profitable niches and trade at less expensive valuations than average, said Weaver.
Vantiv, for instance, trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 15.6, below the 20.7 multiple for the Nasdaq as a whole, while Alliance Data Systems trades at a forward P/E ratio of 16.3. Vantiv's shares are up 16 percent over the last 12 months, while shares of Alliance Data Systems have slipped 1.3 percent.
"Apple is the biggest stock in the Nasdaq and everyone knows why," Weaver said. "But I bet very few people know if ADP
(Reporting by David Randall; editing by Linda Stern and John Pickering)
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