Buying a mutual fund is a lot like going in on a group gift
or joining a co-op--with people you'll never meet. Mutual funds allow a group
of investors to combine their cash and invest it. By pooling their money
together, mutual fund investors can sample a broader range of stocks or bonds
than they could if they were trying to buy the stocks and bonds on their own.
The Mechanics
Many people think of mutual funds as "products."
But when you buy a mutual fund, you're actually buying an ownership stake in a
corporation that in turn hires a money manager to invest its money. The price
of a single ownership stake in a fund is called its net asset value, or NAV.
Invest $1,000 in a fund with an NAV of $118.74, for example, and you will get
8.42 shares. ($1,000 /$118.74
= 8.42.)
The fund manager combines your money with that of other
investors. Taken altogether, those investments are called the fund's assets.
The fund manager invests the fund's assets, typically by buying stocks, bonds,
or a combination of the two. (Some funds buy more complicated security types.)
These stocks or bonds are often referred to as a fund's "holdings"
and all of a fund's holdings together are its "portfolio."
A fund's type depends on the kinds of securities it holds.
For example, a small-company stock fund invests in the stocks of small
companies. What you get as an investor or shareholder is a portion of that
portfolio. Regardless of how much or how little you invest, your shares are the
portfolio in miniature.
For example, Vanguard 500 Index's three largest holdings are
ExxonMobil XOM (3.45% of its portfolio as of March 31, 2011), Apple AAPL
(2.65%), and Chevron CVX (1.78%). A $1,000 investment in that fund means that
you own about $34.50 of ExxonMobil, $26.50 of Apple, and $17.80 of Chevron. In
fact, you own all 500 stocks in the fund's portfolio.
The Benefits
Mutual funds offer some notable benefits to investors.
1. They don't demand large up-front investments.
If you had just $1,000 to invest, it would be difficult for
you to assemble a varied basket of stocks or bonds on your own. For example,
with $1,000, you could buy one share of stock from the largest U.S. company,
then one from the next largest, and so on, but it's likely that you'd run out
of money sometime before purchasing your 20th stock.
If you bought a mutual fund, though, you would be able to
sample many more types of stocks or bonds with that same $1,000. You can make
an initial investment in several funds with just $1,000 in hand; $2,500 will
get you into many more funds. If you invest through an Individual Retirement
Account, you can often get your foot in the door with even less than $1,000.
You can even buy some funds for as little as $50 per month if you agree to
invest a certain dollar amount each month. (We'll cover different investment
methods in an upcoming lesson.)
2. They're easy to buy and sell.
Whether you're investing on your own or hiring a broker or
financial planner to do it for you, funds are easy to buy. Once a fund company
has your money, it often takes just a phone call or mouse click to buy shares
in a fund. Of course, there are exceptions: Closed funds, for example, no
longer accept money from new shareholders.
By the same token, it's also easy to sell a fund. Unlike
many other security types, such as individual stocks, you don't need to find a
buyer when it's time to unload your shares. Instead, the vast majority of
mutual funds offer daily redemptions, meaning that the fund company will give
you cash whenever you're ready to sell. Investors who own closed funds can also
sell at any time.
3. They're regulated.
Mutual fund managers can't take your money and head for some
remote island somewhere. Security exists through regulation set by the
Investment Company Act of 1940. After the stock-market madness of the two
decades prior to 1940, which revealed some big investors' tendencies to take
advantage of small investors (to put it nicely), the government stepped in to
put safeguards in place.
Thanks to the Investment Company Act of 1940 (often called
"the '40 Act"), your mutual fund is actually regulated investment
company (regulated by the Securities & Exchange Commission) and you, as a
mutual fund investor, are an owner of that company. As with other types of
companies, mutual funds have boards of directors that represent the fund's
shareholders. Among other duties, the board is charged with ensuring that the
best available managers are running the fund and that shareholders aren't
overpaying for the managers' services. For example, the board of directors at
Fidelity Magellan FMAGX has hired Fidelity to run the fund on behalf of
shareholders.
The fact that mutual funds are regulated shouldn't give
investors a false sense of security, however. Mutual funds are not insured or
guaranteed. You can lose money in a mutual fund, because a fund's value is
based on the value of all of its portfolio holdings. If the holdings lose
value, so will the fund. The odds that you will lose all of your money in a
mutual fund are very slim, though--all of the stocks or bonds in the portfolio
would have to go belly-up for that to happen. And history suggests that such a
mass implosion is unlikely in the vast majority of fund types.
4. They're professionally managed.
If you plan to buy individual stocks and bonds, you need to
know how to read a company's cash-flow statement or assess the likelihood that
a given company will fail to meet its debt obligations. Such in-depth financial
knowledge is not required to invest in a mutual fund, however. While mutual
fund investors should have a basic understanding of how the stock and bond
markets work, you pay your fund managers to select individual securities for
you.
Still, mutual funds are not fairy-tale investments. As you
will learn in later sessions, some funds are expensive and others perform
poorly. But overall, mutual funds are good investments for those who don't have
the money, time, or interest necessary to compile a collection of securities on
their own.
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Posted By BUBUIOC INC. to
BUBUIOC INC. at 1/01/2013 08:30:00 AM