Mutual Funds

Mutual funds, like stocks and bonds, are very common investment instruments among large and small investors alike. A professional investment advisor manages the fund's investments according to its stated objectives, for instance, long-term growth, current income, etc. This is one of the primary reasons that mutual funds have become so popular.
 
 

Load or No-Load Mutual Funds?

A load mutual fund charges a sales commission for buying shares in the fund. These charges can be front-ended, back-ended, or both and can be quite substantial, ranging to as much as 8 percent or more of the purchase price of the shares.
 
 

Identifying your Mutual Fund Investment Objectives

Investors with virtually the same financial profiles may want their money to work for them in substantially different ways.The investment should do at least as well as the overall stock market; therefore, a mutual fund that tracks the overall performance of a benchmark market index might be the most appropriate choice.
 
 

How Mutual Funds are Priced

Mutual funds are redeemable securities, whereas stocks are tradable securities. Mutual fund shares can only be bought from and redeemed with the sponsor company itself or one of its selling group members. The daily purchase and sale prices of mutual funds are determined in a completely different way from that of a corporation's common stock offerings.
 
 

Evaluating Manager and Fund

A mutual fund's portfolio- or fund manager is responsible for implementing the fund's investment strategy by researching and selecting the specific securities that will be bought and sold in the portfolio.
 
 

Do Large Investors buy Mutual Funds?

Many large investors use mutual funds to solve at least some of their investment problems. It's not at all unusual for big investors (whether corporate or private) to place multimillion-dollar investments into mutual fund accounts. As a matter of fact, institutional investors alone account for more than forty percent of all fund assets.
 
 

Contrasting Mutual and Closed-End Funds

Although mutual funds and closed-end funds are both management companies, they're actually quite different from each other. Despite the fact that the financial media may occasionally make mention of a "closed-end mutual fund", the legal definitions of a closed-end fund and an open-end fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940 actually make the term mutually exclusive and technically impossible for a closed-end mutual fund to even exist.
 
 

Closed-End Funds

Closed-end funds – like open-end or mutual funds – establish a portfolio of securities and issue shares of the portfolio to the investing public. And as with mutual funds, each share represents an undivided interest in the portfolio of securities. Unlike mutual funds, however, closed-end funds typically issue shares to the public only once. They do not continually sell new shares or redeem already-outstanding ones.
 
 

Advantages and Disadvantages of Mutual Funds

The popularity of mutual funds can be attributed to the numerous advantages that they afford investors.Such as Diversification,Low minimum investment,Professional management ...
 
 

6 Mutual Fund Investing Tips

There are six mutual fund investing tips. They are Keep ongoing expenses as low as possible,Don't get blinded by short-term performance,Be aware of your fund manager's track record,Make your investing as easy and automatic as possible, and so on.
 
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