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- From: noreply@invest-faq.com (Christopher Lott)
- Newsgroups: misc.invest.misc,misc.invest.stocks,misc.invest.technical,misc.invest.options,misc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: The Investment FAQ (part 9 of 20)
- Followup-To: misc.invest.misc
- Summary: Answers to frequently asked questions about investments.
- Should be read by anyone who wishes to post to misc.invest.*
- Organization: The Investment FAQ publicity department
- Keywords: invest, finance, stock, bond, fund, broker, exchange, money, FAQ
- URL: http://invest-faq.com/
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- Archive-name: investment-faq/general/part9
- Version: $Id: part09,v 1.61 2003/03/17 02:44:30 lott Exp lott $
- Compiler: Christopher Lott
-
- The Investment FAQ is a collection of frequently asked questions and
- answers about investments and personal finance. This is a plain-text
- version of The Investment FAQ, part 9 of 20. The web site
- always has the latest version, including in-line links. Please browse
- http://invest-faq.com/
-
-
- Terms of Use
-
- The following terms and conditions apply to the plain-text version of
- The Investment FAQ that is posted regularly to various newsgroups.
- Different terms and conditions apply to documents on The Investment
- FAQ web site.
-
- The Investment FAQ is copyright 2003 by Christopher Lott, and is
- protected by copyright as a collective work and/or compilation,
- pursuant to U.S. copyright laws, international conventions, and other
- copyright laws. The contents of The Investment FAQ are intended for
- personal use, not for sale or other commercial redistribution.
- The plain-text version of The Investment FAQ may be copied, stored,
- made available on web sites, or distributed on electronic media
- provided the following conditions are met:
- + The URL of The Investment FAQ home page is displayed prominently.
- + No fees or compensation are charged for this information,
- excluding charges for the media used to distribute it.
- + No advertisements appear on the same web page as this material.
- + Proper attribution is given to the authors of individual articles.
- + This copyright notice is included intact.
-
-
- Disclaimers
-
- Neither the compiler of nor contributors to The Investment FAQ make
- any express or implied warranties (including, without limitation, any
- warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or
- use) regarding the information supplied. The Investment FAQ is
- provided to the user "as is". Neither the compiler nor contributors
- warrant that The Investment FAQ will be error free. Neither the
- compiler nor contributors will be liable to any user or anyone else
- for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, in The
- Investment FAQ or for any damages (whether direct or indirect,
- consequential, punitive or exemplary) resulting therefrom.
-
- Rules, regulations, laws, conditions, rates, and such information
- discussed in this FAQ all change quite rapidly. Information given
- here was current at the time of writing but is almost guaranteed to be
- out of date by the time you read it. Mention of a product does not
- constitute an endorsement. Answers to questions sometimes rely on
- information given in other answers. Readers outside the USA can reach
- US-800 telephone numbers, for a charge, using a service such as MCI's
- Call USA. All prices are listed in US dollars unless otherwise
- specified.
-
- Please send comments and new submissions to the compiler.
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Distributions and Tax Implications
-
- Last-Revised: 27 Jan 1998
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me ), S. Jaguiar, Art Kamlet
- (artkamlet at aol.com), R. Kalia
-
- This article gives a brief summary of the issues surrounding
- distributions made by mutual funds, the tax liability of shareholders
- who recieve these distributions, and the consequences of buying or
- selling shares of a mutual fund shortly before or after such a
- distribution.
-
- Investment management companies (i.e., mutual funds) periodically
- distribute money to their shareholders that they made by trading in the
- shares they hold. These are called dividends or distributions, and the
- shareholder must pay taxes on these payments. Why do they distribute
- the gains instead of reinvesting them? Well, a mutual fund, under The
- Investment Company Act of 1940, is allowed to make the decision to
- distribute substantially all earnings to shareholders at least annually
- and thereby avoid paying taxes on those earnings. And, of course, they
- do. In general, equity funds distribute dividends quarterly, and
- distribute capital gains annually or semi-annually. In general, bond
- funds distribute dividends monthly, and distribute capital gains
- annually or semi-annually.
-
- When a distribution is made, the net asset value (NAV) goes down by the
- same amount. Suppose the NAV is $8 when you bought and has grown to $10
- by some date, we'll pick Dec. 21. On paper you have a profit of $2.
- Then, a $1 distribution is made on Dec. 21. As a result of this
- distribution, the NAV goes down to $9 on Dec. 22 (ignoring any other
- market activity that might happen). Since you received a $1 payment and
- your shares are still worth $9, you still have the $10. However, you
- also have a tax liability for that $1 payment.
-
- Mutual funds commonly make distributions late in the year. Because of
- this, many advise mutual fund investors to be wary of buying into a
- mutual fund very late in the year (i.e., shortly before a distribution).
- Essentially what happens to a person who buys shortly before a
- distribution is that a portion of the investment is immediately returned
- to the investor along with a tax bill. In the short term it essentially
- means a loss for the investor. If the investor had bought in January
- (for example), and had seen the NAV rise nicely over the year, then
- receiving the distribution and tax bill would not be so bad. But when a
- person essentially increases their tax bill with a fund purchase, it is
- like seeing the value of the fund drop by the amount owed to the tax
- man. This is the main reason for checking with a mutual fund for
- planned distributions when making an investment, especially late in the
- year.
-
- But let's look at the issue a different way. The decision of buying
- shortly before a distribution all comes down to whether or not you feel
- that the fund is going to go up more in value than the total taxable
- event will be to you. For instance let's say that a fund is going to
- distribute 6% in income at the end of December. You will have to pay
- tax on that 6% gain, even though your account value won't go up by 6%
- (that's the law). Assuming that you are in a 33% tax bracket, a third
- of that gain (2% of your account value) will be paid in taxes. So it
- comes down to asking yourself the question of whether or not you feel
- that the fund will appreciate by 2% or more between now and the time
- that the income will be distributed. If the fund went up in value by
- 10% between the time of purchase and the distribution, then in the above
- example you would miss out on a 8% after-tax gain by not investing. If
- the fund didn't go up in value by at least 2% then you would take a loss
- and would have been better off waiting. So how clear is your crystal
- ball?
-
- For someone to make the claim that it is always patently better to wait
- until the end of the year to invest so as to avoid capital gains tax is
- ridiculous. Sometimes it is and sometimes it isn't. Investing is a
- most empirical process and every new situation should be looked at
- objectively.
-
- And it's important not to lose sight of the big picture. For a mutual
- fund investor who saw the value of their investment appreciate nicely
- between the time of purchase and the distribution, a distribution just
- means more taxes this year but less tax when the shares are sold. Of
- course it is better to postpone paying taxes, but it's not as though the
- profits would be tax-free if no distribution were made. For those who
- move their investments around every few months or years, the whole issue
- is irrelevant. In my view, people spend too much time trying to beat
- the tax man instead of trying to make more money. This is made worse by
- ratings that measure 'tax efficiency' on the basis of current tax
- liability (distributions) while ignoring future tax liability
- (unrealized capital gains that may not be paid out each year but they
- are still taxed when you sell).
-
- So what are the tax implications based on the timing of any sale?
- Actually, for most people there are none. If you sell your shares on
- Dec. 21, you have $2 in taxable capital gains ($1 from the distribution
- and $1 from the growth from 8 to 9). If you sell on Dec. 22, you have
- $1 in taxable capital gains and $1 in taxable distributions. This can
- make a small difference in some tax brackets, but no difference at all
- in others.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Fees and Expenses
-
- Last-Revised: 28 Jun 1997
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- Investors who put money into a mutual fund gain the benefits of a
- professional investment management company. Like any professional,
- using an investment manager results in some costs. These costs are
- recovered from a mutual fund's investors either through sales charges or
- operation expenses .
-
- Sales charges for an open-end mutual fund include front-end loads and
- back-end loads (redemption fees). A front-end load is a fee paid by an
- investor when purchasing shares in the mutual fund, and is expressed as
- a percentage of the amount to be invested. These loads may be 0% (for a
- no-load fund), around 2% (for a so-called low-load fund), or as high as
- 8% (ouch). A back-end load (or redemption fee) is paid by an investor
- when selling shares in the mutual fund. Unlike front-end loads, a
- back-end load may be a flat fee, or it may be expressed as a sliding
- scale. A sliding-scale means that the redemption fee is high if the
- investor sells shares within the first year of buying them, but declines
- to little or nothing after 3, 4, or 5 years. A sliding-scale fee is
- usually implemented to discourage investors from switching rapidly among
- funds. Loads are used to pay the sales force. The only good thing
- about sales charges is that investors only pay them once.
-
- A closed-end mutual fund is traded like a common stock, so investors
- must pay commissions to purchase shares in the fund. An article
- elsewhere in this FAQ about discount brokers offers information about
- minimizing commissions.
-
- To keep the dollars rolling in over the years, investment management
- companies may impose fees for operating expenses. The total fee load
- charged annually is usually reported as the expense ratio . All annual
- fees are charged against the net value of an investment. Operating
- expenses include the fund manager's salary and bonuses (management
- fees), keeping the books and mailing statements every month (accounting
- fees), legal fees, etc. The total expense ratio ranges from 0% to as
- much as 2% annually. Of course, 0% is a fiction; the investment company
- is simply trying to make their returns look especially good by charging
- no fees for some period of time. According to SEC rules, operating
- expenses may also include marketing expenses. Fees charged to investors
- that cover marketing expenses are called "12b-1 Plan fees." Obviously an
- investor pays fees to cover operating expenses for as long as he or she
- owns shares in the fund. Operating fees are usually calculated and
- accrued on a daily basis, and will be deducted from the account on a
- regular basis, probably monthly.
-
- Other expenses that may apply to an investment in a mutual fund include
- account maintenance fees, exchange (switching) fees, and transaction
- fees. An investor who has a small amount in a mutual fund, maybe under
- $2500, may be forced to pay an annual account maintenance fee. An
- exchange or switching fee refers to any fee paid by an investor when
- switching money within one investment management company from one of the
- company's mutual funds to another mutual fund with that company.
- Finally, a transaction fee is a lot like a sales charge, but it goes to
- the fund rather than to the sales force (as if that made paying this fee
- any less painful).
-
- The best available way to compare fees for different funds, or different
- classes of shares within the same fund, is to look at the prospectus of
- a fund. Near the front, there is a chart comparing expenses for each
- class assuming a 5% return on a $1,000 investment. The prospectus for
- Franklin Mutual Shares, for example, shows that B investors (they call
- it "Class II") pay less in expenses with a holding period of less than 5
- years, but A investors ("Class I") come out ahead if they hold for
- longer than 5 years.
-
- In closing, investors and prospective investors should examine the fee
- structure of mutual funds closely. These fees will diminish returns
- over time. Also, it's important to note that the traditional
- price/quality curve doesn't seem to hold quite as well for mutual funds
- as it does for consumer goods. I mean, if you're in the market for a
- good suit, you know about what you have to pay to get something that
- meets your expectations. But when investing in a mutual fund, you could
- pay a huge sales charge and stiff operating expenses, and in return be
- rewarded with negative returns. Of course, you could also get lucky and
- buy the next hot fund right before it explodes. Caveat emptor.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Index Funds and Beating the Market
-
- Last-Revised: 26 May 1999
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- This article discusses index funds and modern portfolio theory (MPT) as
- espoused by Burton Malkiel, but first makes a digression into the topic
- of "beating the market."
-
- Investors and prospective investors regularly encounter the phrase
- "beating the market" or sometimes "beating the S&P 500." What does this
- mean?
-
- Somehow I'm reminded of the way Garrison Keillor used to start his show
- on Minnesota Public Radio, "Greetings from Lake Woebegon, where all the
- women are beautiful and all the children are above average" .. but I
- digress.
-
- To answer the second question first: The S&P 500 is a broad market
- index. Saying that you "beat the S&P" means that for some period of
- time, the returns on your investments were greater than the returns on
- the S&P index (although you have to ask careful questions about whether
- dividends paid out were counted, or only the capital appreciation
- measured by the rise in stock prices).
-
- Now, the harder question: Is this always the best indicator? This is
- slightly more involved.
-
- Everyone, most especially a mutual fund manager, wants to beat "the
- market". The problem lies in deciding how "the market" did. Let's
- limit things to the universe of stocks traded on U.S. exchanges.. even
- that market is enormous . So how does an aspiring mutual fund manager
- measure his or her performance? By comparing the fund's returns to some
- measure of the market. And now the $64,000 question: What market is the
- most appropriate comparison?
-
- Of course there are many answers. How about the large-cap market, for
- which one widely known (but dubious value) index is the DJIA? What about
- the market of large and mid-cap shares, for which one widely known index
- is the S&P 500? And maybe you should use the small-cap market, for which
- Wilshire maintains various indexes? And what about technology stocks,
- which the NASDAQ composite index tracks somewhat?
-
- As you can see, choosing the benchmark against which you will compare
- yourself is not exactly simple. That said, an awful lot of funds
- compare themselves against the S&P. The finance people say that the S&P
- has some nice properties in the way it is computed. Most market people
- would say that because so much of the market's capitalization is tracked
- by the S&P, it's an appropriate benchmark.
-
- You be the judge.
-
- The importance of indexes like the S&P500 is the debate between passive
- investing and active investing. There are funds called index funds that
- follow a passive investment style. They just hold the stocks in the
- index. That way you do as well as the overall market. It's a
- no-brainer. The person who runs the index fund doesn't go around buying
- and selling based on his or her staff's stock picks. If the overall
- market is good, you do well; if it is not so good, you don't do well.
- The main benefit is low overhead costs. Although the fund manager must
- buy and sell stocks when the index changes or to react to new
- investments and redemptions, otherwise the manager has little to do.
- And of course there is no need to pay for some hotshot group of stock
- pickers.
-
- However, even more important is the "efficient market theory" taught in
- academia that says stock prices follow a random walk. Translated into
- English, this means that stock prices are essentially random and don't
- have trends or patterns in the price movements. This argument pretty
- much attacks technical analysis head-on. The theory also says that
- prices react almost instantaneously to any information - making
- fundamental analysis fairly useless too.
-
- Therefore, a passive investing approach like investing in an index fund
- is supposedly the best idea. John Bogle of the Vanguard fund is one of
- the main proponents of a low-cost index fund.
-
- The people against the idea of the efficient market (including of course
- all the stock brokers who want to make a commission, etc.) subscribe to
- one of two camps - outright snake oil (weird stock picking methods,
- bogus claims, etc.) or research in some camps that point out that the
- market isn't totally efficient. Of course academia is aware of various
- anomalies like the January effect, etc. Also "The Economist" magazine
- did a cover story on the "new technology" a few years ago - things like
- using Chaos Theory, Neural Nets, Genetic Algorithms, etc. etc. - a
- resurgence in the idea that the market was beatable using new technology
- - and proclaimed that the efficient market theory was on the ropes.
-
- However, many say that's an exaggeration. If you look at the records,
- there are very, very few funds and investors who consistently beat the
- averages (the market - approximated by the S&P 500 which as I said is a
- "no brainer investment approach"). What you see is that the majority of
- the funds, etc. don't even match the no-brainer approach to investing.
- Of the small amount who do (the winners), they tend to change from one
- period to another. One period or a couple of periods they are on top,
- then they do much worse than the market. The ones who stay on top for
- years and years and years - like a Peter Lynch - are a very rare breed.
- That's why efficient market types say it's consistent with the random
- nature of the market.
-
- Remember, index funds that track the S&P 500 are just taking advantage
- of the concept of diversification. The only risk they are left with
- (depending on the fund) is whether the entire market goes up and down.
-
- People who pick and choose individual companies or a sector in the
- market are taking on added risk since they are less diversified. This
- is completely consistent with the more risk = possibility of more return
- and possibility of more loss principle. It's just like taking longer
- odds at the race track. So when you choose a non-passive investment
- approach you are either doing two things:
- 1. Just gambling. You realize the odds are against you just like they
- are at the tracks where you take longer odds, but you are willing
- to take that risk for the slim chance of beating the market.
-
-
- 2. You really believe in your own or a hired gun's stock picking
- talent to take on stocks that are classified as a higher risk with
- the possibility of greater return because you know something that
- nobody else knows that really makes the stock a low risk investment
- (secret method, inside information, etc.) Of course everyone thinks
- they belong in this camp even though they are really in the former
- camp, sometimes they win big, most of times they lose, with a few
- out of the zillion investors winning big over a fairly long period.
- It's consistent with the notion that it's gambling.
-
- So you get this picture of active fund managers expending a lot of
- energy on a tread mill running like crazy and staying in the same spot.
- Actually it's not even the same spot since most don't even match the S&P
- 500 due to the added risk they've taken on in their picks or the
- transaction costs of buying and selling. That's why market indexes like
- the S&P 500 are the benchmark. When you pick stocks on your own or pay
- someone to manage your money in an active investment fund, you are
- paying them to do better or hoping you will do better than doing the
- no-brainer passive investment index fund approach that is a reasonable
- expectation. Just think of paying some guy who does worse than if he
- just sat on his butt doing nothing!
-
- The following list of resources will help you learn much, much more
- about index mutual funds.
- * An accessible book that covers investing approaches and academic
- theories on the market, especially modern portfolio theory (MPT)
- and the efficient market hypothesis, is this one (the link points
- to Amazon):
- Burton Malkiel
- A Random Walk Down Wall Street This book was written by a
- former Princeton Prof. who also invested hands-on in the market.
- It's a bestseller, written for the public and available in
- paperback.
-
-
- * IndexFunds.com offers much information about index mutual funds.
- The site is edited by Will McClatchy and published by IndexFunds,
- Inc., of Austin, Texas.
- http://www.indexfunds.com
-
-
- * The list of frequently asked questions about index mutual funds,
- which is maintained by Dale C. Maley.
- http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Prairie/3524/faqperm5.html
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Money-Market Funds
-
- Last-Revised: 16 Aug 1998
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me ), Rich Carreiro (rlcarr at
- animato.arlington.ma.us)
-
- A money-market fund (MMF) is a mutual fund, although a very special type
- of one. The goal of a money-market fund is to preserve principal while
- yielding a modest return. These funds try very, very, very hard to
- maintain a net asset value (NAV) of exactly $1.00. Basically, the
- companies try to make these feel like a high-yield bank account,
- although one should never forget that the money-market fund has no
- insurance against loss.
-
- The NAV stays at $1 for (at least) three reasons:
- 1. The underlying securities in a MMF are very short-term money market
- instruments. Usually maturing in 60 days or less, but always less
- than 180 days. They suffer very little price fluctuation.
- 2. To the extent that they do fluctuate, the fund plays some (legal)
- accounting games (which are available because the securities are so
- close to maturity and because they fluctuate fairly little) with
- how the securities are valued, making it easier to maintain the NAV
- at $1.
- 3. MMFs declare dividends daily, though they are only paid out
- monthly. If you totally cash in your MMF in the middle of the
- month, you'll receive the cumulative declared dividends from the
- 1st of the month to when you sold out. If you only partially
- redeem, the dividends declared on the sold shares will simply be
- part of what you see at the end of the month. This is part of why
- the fund's interest income doesn't raise the NAV.
-
- MMFs remaining at a $1 NAV is not advantageous in the sense that it
- reduces your taxes (in fact, it's the opposite), it's advantageous in
- the sense that it saves you from having to track your basis and compute
- and report your gain/loss every single time you redeem MMF shares, which
- would be a huge pain, since many (most?) people use MMFs as checking
- accounts of a sort. The $1 NAV has nothing to do with being able to
- redeem shares quickly. The shareholders of an MMF could deposit money
- and never touch it again, and it would have no effect on the ability of
- the MMF to maintain a $1 NAV.
-
- Like any other mutual fund, a money-market fund has professional
- management, has some expenses, etc. The return is usually slightly more
- than banks pay on demand deposits, and perhaps a bit less than a bank
- will pay on a 6-month CD. Money-market funds invest in short-term
- (e.g., 30-day) securities from companies or governments that are highly
- liquid and low risk. If you have a cash balance with a brokerage house,
- it's most likely stashed in a money-market fund.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Reading a Prospectus
-
- Last-Revised: 9 Aug 1999
- Contributed-By: Chris Stallman (chris at teenanalyst.com)
-
- Ok, so you just went to a mutual fund family's (e.g., Fidelity) web site
- and requested your first prospectus. As you anxiously wait for it to
- arrive in the mail, you start to wonder what information will be in it
- and how you'll manage to understand it. Understanding a prospectus is
- crucial to investing in a mutual fund once you know a few key points.
-
- When you request information on a mutual fund, they usually send you a
- letter mentioning how great the fund is, the necessary forms you will
- have to fill out to invest in the fund, and a prospectus. You can
- usually just throw away the letter because it is often more of an
- advertisement than anything else. But you should definitely read the
- prospectus because it has all the information you need about the mutual
- fund.
-
- The prospectus is usually broken up into different sections so we'll go
- over what each section's purpose is and what you should look for in it.
-
-
-
- Objective Statement
-
-
- Usually near the front of a prospectus is a small summary or
- statement that explains the mutual fund. This short section tells
- what the goals of the mutual fund are and how it plans to reach
- these goals.
-
- The objective statement is really important in choosing your fund.
- When you choose a fund, it is important to choose one based on your
- investment objective and risk tolerance. The objective statement
- should agree with how you want your money managed because, after
- all, it is your money. For example, if you wanted to reduce your
- exposure to risk and invest for the long-term, you wouldn't want to
- put your money in a fund that invests in technology stocks or other
- risky stocks.
-
-
- Performance
-
-
- The performance section usually gives you information on how the
- mutual fund has performed. There is often a table that gives you
- the fund's performance over the last year, three years, five years,
- and sometimes ten years.
-
- The fund's performance usually helps you see how the fund might
- perform but you should not use this to decide if you are going to
- invest in it or not. Funds that do well one year don't always do
- well the next.
-
- It's often wise to compare the fund's performance with that of the
- index. If a fund consistently under performs the index by 5% or
- more, it may not be a fund that you want to invest in for the
- long-term because that difference can mean the difference of
- retiring with $200,000 and retiring with $1.5 million.
-
- Usually in the performance section, there is a small part where
- they show how a $10,000 investment would perform over time. This
- helps give you an idea of how your money would do if you invested
- in it but this number generally doesn't include taxes and inflation
- so your portfolio would probably not return as much as the
- prospectus says.
-
-
- Fees and Expenses
-
-
- Like most things in life, a mutual fund doesn't operate for free.
- It costs a mutual fund family a lot of money to manage everyone's
- money so they put in some little fees that the investors pay in
- order to make up for the fund's expenses.
-
- One fee that you will come across is a management fee, which all
- funds charge. Mutual funds charge this fee so that the fund can be
- run. The money collected from the shareholders from this fee is
- used to pay for the expenses incurred from buying and selling large
- amounts of shares in stocks. This fee usually ranges from about
- 0.5% up to over 2%.
-
- Another fee that you're likely to encounter is a 12b-1 fee. The
- money collected from charging this fee is usually used for
- marketing and advertising the fund. This fee usually ranges
- between 0.25-0.75%. However, not all funds charge a 12b-1 fee.
-
- One fee that is a little less common but still exists in many funds
- is a deferred sales load. Frequent buying and selling of shares in
- a mutual fund costs the mutual fund money so they created a
- deferred sales charge to discourage this activity. This fee
- sometimes disappears after a certain period and can range from 0.5%
- up to 5%.
-
- When you are looking through a prospectus, be sure that you look
- over these fees because even if a mutual fund performs well, its
- growth may be limited by high expenses.
-
-
- How to Purchase and Redeem Shares
-
- This section provides information on how you can get your money
- into the mutual fund and how you can sell shares when you need the
- money out of the fund. These methods are usually the same in every
- fund.
-
- The most common method to invest in a fund once you are in it is to
- simply fill out investment forms and write a check to the mutual
- fund family. This is probably the easiest but it often takes a few
- days or even a week to have the funds credited to your account.
-
- Another method that is common is automatic withdrawals. These
- allow you to have a certain amount which you choose to be deducted
- from your bank account each month. These are excellent for getting
- into the habit of investing on a regular basis.
-
- Wire transfers are also possible if you want to have your money
- invested quickly. However, most funds charge you a small fee for
- doing this and some do not allow you to wire any funds if you do
- not meet their minimum amount.
-
- The fund will also provide information on how you can redeem your
- shares. One common way is to request a redemption by filling out a
- form or writing a letter to the mutual fund family. This is the
- most common method but it isn't the only one.
-
- You can also request to redeem your shares by calling the mutual
- fund itself. This option saves you a few days but you have to make
- sure the fund has this option open to the shareholders.
-
- You can also request to have your investment wired into your bank
- account. This is a very fast method for redeeming shares but you
- usually have to pay a fee for doing this. And like redeeming
- shares over the phone, you have to make sure the mutual fund offers
- this option.
-
-
- Now that you understand the basics of a prospectus, you're one step
- closer to getting started in mutual funds. So when you finally receive
- the information you requested on a mutual fund, look it over carefully
- and make an educated decision if it is right for you.
-
- For more insights from Chris Stallman, visit
- http://www.teenanalyst.com
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Redemptions
-
- Last-Revised: 5 May 1997
- Contributed-By: A. Chowdhury
-
- On the stock markets, every time someone sells a share, someone buys it,
- or in other words, equal numbers of opposing bets on the future are
- placed each day. However, in the case of open-end mutual funds, every
- dollar redeemed in a day isn't necessarily replaced by an invested
- dollar, and every dollar invested in a day doesn't go to someone
- redeeming shares. Still, although mutual fund shares are not sold
- directly by one investor to another investor, the underlying situation
- is the same as stocks.
-
- If a mutual fund has no cash, any redemption requires the fund manager
- to sell an appropriate amount of shares to cover the redemption; i.e.,
- someone would have to be found to buy those shares. Similarly, any new
- investment would require the manager to find someone to sell shares so
- the new investment can be put to work. So the manager acts somewhat
- like the fund investor's representative in buying/selling shares.
-
- A typical mutual fund has some cash to use as a buffer, which confuses
- the issue but doesn't fundamentally change it. Some money comes in, and
- some flows out, much of it cancels each other out. If there is a small
- imbalance, it can be covered from the fund's cash position, but not if
- there is a big imbalance. If the manager covers your sale from the
- fund's cash, he/she is reducing the fund's cash and so increasing the
- fund's stock exposure (%), in other words he/she is betting on the
- market at the same time as you are betting against it. Of course if
- there is a large imbalance between money coming in and out, exceeding
- the cash on hand, then the manager has to go to the stock market to
- buy/sell. And so forth.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Types of Funds
-
- Last-Revised: 12 Aug 1999
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- This article lists the most common investment fund types. A type of
- fund is typically characterized by its investment strategy (i.e., its
- goals). For example, a fund manager might set a goal of generating
- income, or growing the capital, or just about anything. (Of course they
- don't usually set a goal of losing money, even though that might be one
- of the easist goals to achieve :-). If you understand the types of
- funds, you will have a decent grasp on how funds invest their money.
-
- When choosing a fund, it's important to make sure that the fund's goals
- align well with your own. Your selection will depend on your investment
- strategy, tax situation, and many other factors.
-
-
-
- Money-market funds
- Goal: preserve principal while yielding a modest return. These
- funds are a very special sort of mutual fund. They invest in
- short-term securities that pay a modest rate of interest and are
- very safe. See the article on money-market funds elsewhere in this
- FAQ for an explanation of the $1.00 share price, etc.
-
-
- Balanced Funds
- Goal: grow the principal and generate income. These funds buy both
- stocks and bonds. Because the investments are highly diversified,
- investors reduce their market risk (see the article on risk
- elsewhere in this FAQ).
-
-
- Index funds
- Goal: match the performance of the markets. An index fund
- essentially sinks its money into the market in a way determined by
- some market index and does almost no further trading. This might
- be a bond or a stock index. For example, a stock index fund based
- on the Dow Jones Industrial Average would buy shares in the 30
- stocks that make up the Dow, only buying or selling shares as
- needed to invest new money or to cash out investors. The advantage
- of an index fund is the very low expenses. After all, it doesn't
- cost much to run one. See the article on index funds elsewhere in
- this FAQ.
-
-
- Pure bond funds
- Bond funds buy bonds issued by many different types of companies.
- A few varieties are listed here, but please note that the
- boundaries are rarely as cut-and-dried as I've listed here.
-
-
-
- Bond (or "Income") funds
- Goal: generate income while preserving principal as much as
- possible. These funds invest in medium- to long-term bonds
- issued by corporations and governments. Variations on this
- type of fund include corporate bond funds and government bond
- funds. See the article on bond basics elsewhere in this FAQ.
- Holding long-term bonds opens the owner to the risk that
- interest rates may increase, dropping the value of the bond.
-
-
- Tax-free Bond Funds (aka Tax-Free Income or Municipal Bond Funds)
- Goal: generate tax-free income while preserving principal as
- much as possible. These funds buy bonds issued by
- municipalities. Income from these securities are not subject
- to US federal income tax.
-
-
- Junk (or "High-yield") bond funds
- Goal: generate as much income as possible. These funds buy
- bonds with ratings that are quite a bit lower than
- high-quality corporate and government bonds, hence the common
- name "junk." Because the risk of default on junk bonds is high
- when compared to high-quality bonds, these funds have an added
- degree of volatility and risk.
-
-
-
- Pure stock funds
- Stock funds buy shares in many different types of companies. A few
- varieties are listed here, but please note that the boundaries are
- rarely as cut-and-dried as I've listed here.
-
-
-
- Aggressive growth funds
- Goal: capital growth; dividend income is neglected. These
- funds buy shares in companies that have the potential for
- explosive growth (these companies never pay dividends). Of
- course such shares also have the potential to go bankrupt
- suddenly, so these funds tend to have high price volatility.
- For example, an actively managed aggressive-growth stock fund
- might seek to buy the initial offerings of small companies,
- possibly selling them again very quickly for big profits.
-
-
- Growth funds
- Goal: capital growth, but consider some dividend income.
- These funds buy shares in companies that are growing rapidly
- but are probably not going to go out of business too quickly.
-
-
- Growth and Income funds
- Goal: Grow the principal and generate some income. These
- funds buy shares in companies that have modest prospect for
- growth and pay nice dividend yields. The canonical example of
- a company that pays a fat dividend without growing much was a
- utility company, but with the onset of deregulation and
- competition, I'm not sure of a good example anymore.
-
-
- Sector funds
- Goal: Invest in a specific industry (e.g.,
- telecommunications). These funds allow the small investor to
- invest in a highly select industry. The funds usually aim for
- growth.
-
-
- Another way of categorizing stock funds is by the size of the
- companies they invest in, as measured by the market capitalization,
- usually abbreviated as market cap. (Also see the article in the
- FAQ about market caps .) The three main categories:
-
-
-
- Small cap stock funds
- These funds buy shares of small companies. Think new IPOs.
- The stock prices for these companies tend to be highly
- volatile, and the companies never (ever) pay a dividend. You
- may also find funds called micro cap, which invest in the
- smallest of publically traded companies.
-
-
- Mid cap stock funds
- These funds buy shares of medium-size companies. The stock
- prices for these companies are less volatile than the small
- cap companies, but more volatile (and with greater potential
- for growth) than the large cap companies.
-
-
- Large cap stock funds
- These funds buy shares of big companies. Think IBM. The
- stock prices for these companies tend to be relatively stable,
- and the companies may pay a decent dividend.
-
-
-
- International Funds
- Goal: Invest in stocks or bonds of companies located outside the
- investor's home country. There are many variations here. As a
- rule of thumb, a fund labeled "international" will buy only foreign
- securities. A "global" fund will likely spread its investments
- across domestic and foreign securities. A "regional" fund will
- concentrate on markets in one part of the world. And you might see
- "emerging" funds, which focus on developing countries and the
- securities listed on exchanges in those countries.
-
- In the discussion above, we pretty much assumed that the funds
- would be investing in securities issued by U.S. companies. Of
- course any of the strategies and goals mentioned above might be
- pursued in any market. A risk in these funds that's absent from
- domestic investments is currency risk. The exchange rate of the
- domestic currency to the foreign currency will fluctuate at the
- same time as the investment, which can easily increase -- or
- reverse -- substantial gains abroad.
- Another important distinction for stock and bond funds is the difference
- between actively managed funds and index funds. An actively managed
- fund is run by an investment manager who seeks to "beat the market" by
- making trades during the course of the year. The debate over manged
- versus index funds is every bit the equal of the debate over load versus
- no-load funds. YOU decide for yourself.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Mutual Funds - Versus Stocks
-
- Last-Revised: 10 Aug 1999
- Contributed-By: Maurice E. Suhre, Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- This article discusses the relative advantages of stocks and mutual
- funds.
-
- Question: What advantages do mutual funds offer over stocks?
-
- Here are some considerations.
- * A mutual fund offers a great deal of diversification starting with
- the very first dollar invested, because a mutual fund may own tens
- or hundreds of different securities. This diversification helps
- reduce the risk of loss because even if any one holding tanks, the
- overall value doesn't drop by much. If you're buying individual
- stocks, you can't get much diversity unless you have $10K or so.
- * Small sums of money get you much further in mutual funds than in
- stocks. First, you can set up an automatic investment plan with
- many fund companies that lets you put in as little as $50 per
- month. Second, the commissions for stock purchases will be higher
- than the cost of buying no-load funds :-) (Of course, the fund's
- various expenses like commissions are already taken out of the
- NAV). Smaller sized purchases of stocks will have relatively high
- commissions on a percentage basis, although with the $10 trade
- becoming common, this is a bit less of a concern than it once was.
- * You can exit a fund without getting caught on the bid/ask spread.
- * Funds provide a cheap and easy method for reinvesting dividends.
- * Last but most certainly not least, when you buy a fund you're in
- essence hiring a professional to manage your money for you. That
- professional is (presumably) monitoring the economy and the markets
- to adjust the fund's holdings appropriately.
-
- Question: Do stocks have any advantages compared to mutual funds?
-
- Here are some considerations that will help you judge.
- * The opposite of the diversification issue: If you own just one
- stock and it doubles, you are up 100%. If a mutual fund owns 50
- stocks and one doubles, it is up 2%. On the other hand, if you own
- just one stock and it drops in half, you are down 50% but the
- mutual fund is down 1%. Cuts both ways.
- * If you hold your stocks several years, you aren't nicked a 1% or so
- management fee every year (although some brokerage firms charge if
- there aren't enough trades).
- * You can take your profits when you want to and won't inadvertently
- buy a tax liability. (This refers to the common practice among
- funds of distributing capital gains around November or December of
- each year. See the article elsewhere in this FAQ for more
- details.)
- * You can do a covered write option strategy. (See the article on
- options on stocks for more details.)
- * You can structure your portfolio differently from any existing
- mutual fund portfolio. (Although with the current universe of
- funds I'm not certain what could possibly be missing out there!)
- * You can buy smaller cap stocks which aren't suitable for mutual
- funds to invest in.
- * You have a potential profit opportunity by shorting stocks. (You
- cannot, in general, short mutual funds.)
- * The argument is offered that the funds have a "herd" mentality and
- they all end up owning the same stocks. You may be able to pick
- stocks better.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Real Estate - 12 Steps to Buying a Home
-
- Last-Revised: 19 Sep 1999
- Contributed-By: Blanche Evans
-
- Why do you want to make a change? Are you ready to start a family, plant
- your own garden? Do you feel you've finally "arrived" at your company?
- Maybe a raise, or a bonus, or a baby on the way has made you think about
- living in a home of your own.
-
- Whatever the reason you are thinking about a home, there are 12 steps
- you will inevitably take. If you do them in the right order, you will
- save yourself time, frustration, and money. For example, if you start
- shopping for homes on the Internet without knowing how much you can
- spend, you will not only waste time looking at the wrong homes, but you
- may ultimately be disappointed at what you can actually afford.
- 1. FIND OUT HOW MUCH YOU CAN SPEND
-
- The first thing you need to do is figure out what kind of home you
- want to buy and how much you can afford to pay in monthly
- installments.
-
- Keep in mind that the results of your calculations will only be an
- estimate. Until you have chosen a home and the type of loan you
- want, and communicated with a lender, you can only use the
- calculated amount to help you determine a price range of homes you
- want to preview.
-
-
- 2. GET PRE-APPROVED FOR A LOAN
-
- Either go to a mortgage broker or a direct lender and find out for
- certain the size of mortgage for which you can qualify. The
- pre-approval letter the lender issues you will help you be taken
- more seriously by agents and sellers because they will recognize
- you as someone who is prepared to buy. If you want a larger
- mortgage or better rate, investigate the government sites such as
- HUD.
-
-
- 3. HIRE AN AGENT, PARTICULARLY A BUYER'S AGENT
-
- Using an agent can help you in numerous ways, especially because
- you are already paying for those services in the purchase price of
- the home. Both the seller's agent and the buyer's agent are paid
- out of the transaction proceeds that are included in the marketing
- price of the home. If you don't take advantage of an agent, you
- are paying for services you aren't getting. If you are planning to
- buy a home available through foreclosure or a for-sale-by-owner
- (FSBO), you can still use the services of an agent. Agents will
- negotiate with you on their fees and the amount of service you will
- receive for those fees, and you can arrange for them to be paid out
- of the transaction, not out of your pocket.
-
- Start by narrowing the field. If you are interested in a certain
- neighborhood in your town, find out who the experts are in that
- area of town. They will be better informed and more attuned to the
- "grapevine," and are better positioned to network with other agents
- in the same area. Contrary to popular belief only 20 percent of
- homes are actually sold through newspaper ads. The other 80
- percent are sold through networking among agents. If you are
- relocating to a new city, ask agents in your own town to refer you
- to agents in your new area. They will be happy to do so, because
- if you buy a home from their referral, they will receive a referral
- fee, so they are motivated to make certain you find the right agent
- to assist you in buying a home.
-
-
- 4. SIGN A BUYER'S AGREEMENT
-
- Again, if you find an agent you like, go all the way and sign a
- buyer's representation agreement. This agreement means that you
- will have one agent representing you as a buyer. The agreement
- empowers the agent to not only search out the latest Multiple
- Listing Service list, but to seek alternative means of finding you
- a home, including searching foreclosures and homes for sale by
- owner. With a signed agreement, the agent becomes a fiduciary and
- must act, by law, in your best interests.
-
-
- 5. BE AWARE OF YOUR LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- As you shop for homes, keep in mind what you like and don't like
- and pass along your feelings to the agent. You should feel
- comfortable looking at numerous homes, but neither you nor your
- agent is interested in wasting time on homes that aren't
- appropriate. Like any relationship, your home will not be perfect.
- If you are finding that most of your criteria is met, it shouldn't
- be long before you find the right home. Think in terms of
- possibilities as well as what you see is what you get. Perhaps a
- home isn't move-in perfect, but with a little work it could be the
- home for you. Don't let cosmetic or minor remodeling problems
- discourage you. Many remodeling jobs add tremendous value to a
- home. If you remodel a kitchen, for example, you may receive as
- much as a 128 percent return on your investment. Talk with your
- agent, friends, relatives, and contractors and find out what it
- will cost to remodel the home the way you want it.
-
-
- 6. WRITE A CONTRACT
-
- When you find the home you want, you will write a contract, either
- through your agent or your attorney, or on your own. Your offer
- should spell out what you are willing to pay for and what you are
- not, when you want to close, and when you want to take possession
- of the home. Your contract should be contingent upon getting an
- inspection and evaluating the results. If the inspection reveals a
- big problem, you and the seller can renegotiate the purchase price
- if you are still interested in buying.
-
-
- 7. GET THE LOAN UNDERWAY
-
- As soon as the seller agrees to the contract, you must start
- following through on your loan. Take the contract to the lender
- and let it start the loan process in earnest. If you have been
- preapproved, much of the legwork has already been done and your
- loan will process more quickly.
-
-
- 8. THE HOME WILL BE APPRAISED
-
- The lender will arrange to have the home appraised, which may
- affect whether the loan is granted. But the likelihood of a
- homeselling for more than a lender is willing to lend is slim. The
- real estate industry not only keeps up with how quickly homes sell,
- but how much they sell for in an area. Most lenders will have a
- ceiling on the amount of square feet per home they will lend in a
- certain neighborhood. If a home is overpriced, it will quickly be
- obvious. You can then go back to the seller and renegotiate.
-
-
- 9. THE HOME IS INSPECTED
-
- In many markets, you will have the inspection after the contract is
- signed, rather than before. This is a better protection for the
- buyer. The inspection can reveal some nasty shocks, though. Your
- inspector may find a major problem with the furnace or the
- foundation. These are problems that must be fixed or the home
- cannot be conveyed. The seller then has to arrange to pay for the
- repairs, or have the repairs paid for out of the contract proceeds
- via a mechanic's lien. Before you can truly set the closing date,
- the repairs have to be made and approved by the buyer.
-
-
- 10. NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE AS YOU GET READY TO MOVE
-
- As you find a mover, pack your things, and arrange days off a work
- around the closing date, you will find that things can still
- change. It is the most intense, nerve-wracking time of the
- transaction -- waiting for the other shoe to drop. You think you
- may have addressed all the issues and closing will proceed without
- any other hitches, but negotiations still continue as you
- reevaluate the inspection report, or find out the chandelier you
- thought was included is actually excluded from the contract. As
- you revisit the home to show your relatives, your hopes raise, even
- through your doubts that the home will ever be yours increase.
-
-
- 11. CLOSING -- BE PREPARED FOR ANYTHING TO HAPPEN
-
- Until closing, and even during closing, anything can happen. You
- find out that your closing costs are higher than you thought they
- would be because some additional service fees have been added by
- the lender. A glitch could come out in your credit report that
- delays the sale; a problem the owner was supposed to fix wasn't
- repaired in time; the homeowner can decide that she or he doesn't
- want to pay for the home warranty after all; the appraisal may come
- in the day before closing and be short of the asking price of the
- home. If so, the buyer, seller, and their agents have to figure
- out how to make up the shortfall. Do they lower the price of the
- home? Do the agents pay for the difference out of their
- commissions? How will last-minute problems be handled? The
- negotiating table is an emotionally explosive place. That is why
- closings are generally held in private rooms with the buyers and
- sellers separated.
-
-
- 12. YOU GET THE KEYS
-
- It's all over. The home is yours. Congratulations.
-
- This article was excerpted from homesurfing.net: The Insider's Guide to
- Buying and Selling Your Home Using the Internet , by Blanche Evans.
- Copyright 1999 by Dearborn Financial Publishing. Reprinted by
- permission of the publisher Dearborn, A Kaplan Professional Company.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Real Estate - Investment Trusts (REITs)
-
- Last-Revised: 8 Dec 1995
- Contributed-By: Braden Glett (glett at prodigy.net)
-
- A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is a company that invests its
- assets in real estate holdings. You get a share of the earnings,
- depreciation, etc. from the portfolio of real estate holdings that the
- REIT owns. Thus, you get many of the same benefits of being a landlord
- without too many of the hassles. You also have a much more liquid
- investment than you do when directly investing in real estate. The
- downsides are that you have no control over when the company will sell
- its holdings or how it will manage them, like you would have if you
- owned an apartment building on your own.
-
- Essentially, REITs are the same as stocks, only the business they are
- engaged in is different than what is commonly referred to as "stocks" by
- most folks. Common stocks are ownership shares generally in
- manufacturing or service businesses. REITs shares on the other hand are
- the same, just engaged in the holding of an asset for rental, rather
- than producing a manufactured product. In both cases, though, the
- shareholder is paid what is left over after business expenses,
- interest/principal, and preferred shareholders' dividends are paid.
- Common stockholders are always last in line, and their earnings are
- highly variable because of this. Also, because their returns are so
- unpredictable, common shareholders demand a higher expected rate of
- return than lenders (bondholders). This is why equity financing is the
- highest-cost form of financing for any corporation, whether the
- corporation be a REIT or mfg firm.
-
- An interesting thing about REITs is that they are probably the best
- inflation hedge around. Far better than gold stocks, which give almost
- no return over long periods of time. Most of them yield 7-10% dividend
- yield. However, they almost always lack the potential for tremendous
- price appreciation (and depreciation) that you get with most common
- stocks. There are exceptions, of course, but they are few and far
- between.
-
- If you invest in them, pick several REITs instead of one. They are
- subject to ineptitude on the part of management just like any company's
- stock, so diversification is important. However, they are a rather
- conservative investment, with long-term returns lower than common stocks
- of other industries. This is because rental revenues do net usually
- vary as much as revenues at a mfg or service firm.
-
- REITNet, a full-service real estate information site, offers a
- comprehensive guide to Real Estate Investment Trusts.
- http://www.reitnet.com
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Compilation Copyright (c) 2003 by Christopher Lott.
-