Investing in Mutual Funds
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Transcript Investing in Mutual Funds
Investing Through Mutual Funds
Objectives
Identify why people invest in mutual
funds.
Distinguish among the four major
objectives of mutual funds.
Classify mutual funds by portfolio.
List the unique benefits of mutual funds.
Objectives
Describe the various charges and fees
associated with investing in mutual funds.
Explain how to select a mutual fund in
which to invest.
Recognize valid reasons for selling a
mutual fund investment.
Investing Through Mutual Funds
MUTUAL FUND . . .
open-end investment company combining
funds of investors who have purchased
shares in a diversified portfolio of securities.
What is a Mutual Fund?
A pool of money
Managed by a professional investor
Manager works for an investment firm
Each fund has a specific objective
Over 6,000 funds to choose from
Mutual Funds
Three Reasons Why People
Purchase Mutual Funds
Diversification
funds of many investors are pooled and
used to purchase a variety of investments
Professional management
who is the fund’s manager?
managers can change
Convenience
phone
mail
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Why Investors Purchase Mutual Funds
Professional management.
Who is the fund’s manager?
Managers can change.
Be aware of the scandal involving late
trading.
Diversification.
Investors funds are used to purchase a
variety of investments. This variety
provides some safety.
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Reasons for Investing Through Mutual
Funds
New/more types of funds
Few or no sales charges
Some performed better than common
stock
Widespread marketing
Selection is easier
Closed- and Open-End Funds
Closed-end funds (7% of funds).
Shares are issued by an investment company only
when the fund is organized.
After all original shares are sold you can purchase
shares only from another investor who is willing to
sell.
Traded on exchanges and over-the-counter.
Open-end funds (91% of funds).
Shares are issued and redeemed by the investment
company at the request of investors.
Investors can buy and sell shares at the net asset
value (NAV).
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Exchange-Traded Funds
Invests in the stocks contained in a
specific stock market index, like the
Standard and Poor’s 500 stock index.
Performance of shares in the fund tend to
mirror the performance of the index.
Low management fees since there is less
need for decisions made by a portfolio
manager.
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Reasons for Investing Through Mutual
Funds
Dispense profits to investors
Investors expect dividend income
Investors expect price appreciation
Closed and Open End Funds
Closed end fund (10% of funds)
limited number of shares issued initially
then can only purchase shares from
another investor willing to sell theirs
Open end fund (90% of funds)
no limitations on the number of shares
the investment company can issue
shares are issued and redeemed by the
investment company
Net Asset Value
portfolio market value - liabilities
the number of shares outstanding
Offer price = NAV + sales commission
Objectives of Mutual Funds
Current income
Long-term growth
Growth and income
Balanced
Classification of Mutual Funds
Common stock
Balanced
Bond
Specialty
Money market
Unique Benefits of Mutual Funds
Recordkeeping/reporting
Easy purchase and sale
Automatic reinvestment
IRS-qualified tax-sheltered retirement
Withdrawal plans
Collateral for loans
Costs of Investing Through Mutual
Funds
Management fees
Loan funds
No-load funds
Costs of Investing Through Mutual
Funds
Hidden fees
Deferred load
Redemption
12b-1
Disclosure of Fees
“Which is better, load or no-load?”
Load vs. No Load Funds
Load Fund
pay a commission to a sales
agent when you buy shares
usually 3-8%
No Load Fund
no sales charge paid
purchased directly from the
investment company
usually have an 800 number you can call
Management Fees
and Other Charges
Contingent deferred sales load (back-end
load) (Class B shares).
Charged upon withdrawal of funds (1-5%).
Generally decreases on a sliding scale depending
on the number of years shares are held.
Management fee.
Charged yearly (.5%-1.25% average) based on a
percentage of the funds asset value.
12b-1 fees (Class C shares).
Annual fee to defray advertising and marketing
costs of the fund.
1% or less of a fund’s assets per year.
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Classification of Mutual Funds
Stock funds.
Aggressive growth funds buy stocks in small, fastgrowing companies.
Equity income funds invest in stock of companies
with a long history of paying dividends.
Growth buy stock in companies with higher-thanaverage revenue and earnings growth.
Global funds buy stock in companies in the U.S.
and other countries, while international funds buy
stock only in companies outside the United States.
Index buys stocks that mirror an index.
Large-cap funds invest in companies with
capitalization of $5 billion or more.
Mid-cap funds buy stock in companies whose
capitalization is between $1 and $5 billion.
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Classification of Mutual Funds
(continued)
Regional funds buy stock in companies in a
specific region of the world.
Sector funds buy stock in companies in a
particular industry such as biotechnology.
Small-cap funds buy stock in lesser-known
companies with a capitalization of less than 500
million.
Socially responsible funds avoid investing in
companies that produce harmful products.
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Classification of Mutual Funds
(continued)
Bond funds.
High-yield (junk) bond funds buy corporate
bonds that are higher risk and higher yield.
Index bond funds invest in a sampling of
bonds included in an index.
Intermediate corporate bonds (5-10 years).
Intermediate U.S. bond funds buy treasury
notes with maturities of 5-10 years.
Long-term corporate bonds (> 10 years).
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Classification of Mutual Funds
(continued)
Long-term U.S. bond funds: U.S. Treasury and
U.S. zero-coupon bonds with maturities > than
10 years.
Municipal bonds: Invest in municipal bonds
that provide investors tax-free interest income.
Short-term U.S. bond funds invest in
U.S.Treasury issues of 1-5 years.
Short-term corporate bond funds: Investment
grade bonds with maturities of 1-5 years.
World bond funds buy bonds of foreign
companies and governments.
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Classification of Mutual Funds
(continued)
Other funds.
Asset allocation funds: invest in various asset
classes, such as stocks, and bonds, with
precise amounts within each type.
Balanced funds: Invest in both stocks and
bonds, with the primary objectives of
conserving principal, providing income as well
as growth.
Money market funds: Invest in CD’s,
government securities, and other safe
investments.
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Strategies for Selecting a Mutual
Fund
Match goals
Locate sources of comparative
performance data
Financial press (i.e. Wall Street Journal,
Barron’s)
Magazines (i.e. Fortune, Kiplinger’s)
Specialized mutual fund publications
Families of Funds
A family of funds exists when one
investment company manages a group of
mutual funds.
Each fund in the family has a different
financial objective.
Exchange privileges allow you to move
your money from one fund to another
within the fund family with little or no
charge.
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Steps to Evaluate Mutual Funds
Are you ready to invest in mutual funds?
Determine your risk tolerance.
Determine your investment objectives.
Obtain the money you need invest.
A fund’s objective should match your
investment objective.
Evaluate any mutual fund before buying
or selling (www.morningstar.com)
Consider managed funds vs. indexed
funds
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Other Sources of Fund Information
Mutual fund prospectus tells the funds
objective and:
A statement describing the risk factors.
A description of the fund’s past performance.
A statement describing the type of investments in
the fund’s portfolio.
Information on how to open an account.
Dividends, distributions and taxes.
Information about the fund’s management.
The process for investors to buy or sell shares.
Services provided to investors.
The turnover ratio of the fund’s investments.
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Mutual Fund Transactions
You can open an account from $250 to
$3,000 and up depending on the fund &
family.
Open-end, no-load directly from
the investment company by phone, mail,
online, or from a discount broker.
Closed-end or exchange-traded funds
are purchased through a broker; traded
on stock exchanges and over-thecounter.
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When To Sell
Fund performs poorly compared with
similar funds
Perception of economic trends indicates
business cycle will smooth out soon
Fund grows too rapidly or becomes too
large
Fund taken over by new manager
Investment goals become more
conservative
Need cash