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Chapter Fifteen Investing Through Mutual Funds Introduction • Investment Company – a corporation, trust, or partnership in which investors with similar financial goals pool their funds so as to utilize professional management and to diversify their investments in securities and other investments. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 2 Introduction (continued) • Mutual Fund – an investment company that combines the funds of investors who have purchased shares of ownership in the investment company and then invests that money in a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds issued by other corporations or governments. • Portfolio – consists of a collection of securities and other investment alternatives. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 3 What Investors Expect from Mutual Funds • Closed-End Investment Company – issues a limited and fixed number of shares and does not buy them back. • Open-End Mutual Fund – always ready to sell new shares of ownership and to buy back previously sold shares at the fund’s current share price. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 4 Investors Expect Mutual Fund Dividend Income • Mutual Fund Dividends – income paid to investors out of profits earned by the mutual fund from the investments it has made. – Mutual funds dividends represent current income to mutual fund shareholders. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 5 Capital Gains Distributions • Capital Gains Distributions – represent the net gains that a fund realizes when it sells securities that were held in the fund’s portfolio. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 6 Investors Expect Capital Gains Through Price Appreciation • Mutual fund investors also expect to profit when they sell their shares. • Net Asset Value (NAV) – the per-share value of the mutual fund. • Unrealized Capital Gains – merely “paper profits” on the accounts of the mutual fund. • When such gains are “realized” by the mutual fund company, they are paid to fund investors as capital gains distributions. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 7 Mutual Funds Have Different Investment Objectives • Prospectus – a mutual fund’s investment objectives must be stated in this. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 8 Funds with an Income Objective • Bond Fund – aims to earn current income without incurring undue risk and to pay ordinary income dividend distributions. • Municipal Bond (Tax-Exempt) Fund – attempts to earn current tax-exempt income by investing solely in municipal bonds issued by cities, states, and various districts and political subdivisions. • Mortgage Fund – invests in mortgage-backed securities. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 9 Funds with a Balanced Objective • Balanced Funds – invest in a mixture of bonds, preferred stocks, and blue-chip common stocks. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 10 Funds with a Growth Objective • Growth Fund – seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing in the common stocks of companies whose values are expected to grow faster than usual. • Value Fund – specializes in growth stocks whose prices appear to be low, based on the logic that such stocks are currently out of favor and under-priced. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 11 Funds with a Growth Objective (continued) • Aggressive-Growth Fund (or Maximum Capital Gains Fund) – seeks the greatest long-term capital appreciation and incurs the greatest fluctuation in the price of its shares. • Small-Cap Fund (or Small-Capitalization Fund) – specializes in investing in lesser-known mid-sized companies with market capitalization of less than $1 billion that are expected to grow rapidly. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 12 Funds with a Growth Objective (continued) • Sector Fund – heavily invests in common stocks from one industry or one portion of the economy that are expected to grow, perhaps very rapidly. • Precious Metals and Gold Funds – seek longterm capital appreciation by investing in securities associated with gold, silver, and other precious metals. • Global Fund – invests primarily in growth stocks of companies listed on foreign exchanges. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 13 Funds with a Growth and Income Objective • Growth and Income Fund – objective is a combination of growth and income; invests in companies expected to show average or better growth and to pay steady or rising dividends. • Life-Cycle Funds – create a diversified, all-in-one portfolio for those individuals who do not wish to actively manage their own investments. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 14 Funds with a Growth and Income Objective (continued) • Socially Conscious Funds – usually invest in firms with good records on the environment, human rights and public safety. • Mutual Fund Funds – earn a return by investing in other mutual funds, thereby providing extensive diversification. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 15 Unique Features of Mutual Funds • Easy Purchase and Sale – after you have opened an account with a mutual fund company, you can easily buy and sell shares. • Check Writing and Wiring of Funds • Automatic Investment – Most funds allow investors to make periodic monthly or quarterly payments using money automatically transferred from their bank account to the mutual fund company. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 16 Unique Features of Mutual Funds (continued) • Automatic Reinvestment – allows for the automatic use of ordinary income dividend distributions, capital gains distributions, and interest to buy additional shares of the fund without paying any commissions. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 17 Figure 15.2: The Wisdom of Automatic Reinvestment Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 18 Switching Privileges within a Mutual Fund Family • Switching Privilege (or Exchange Privilege) – permits mutual fund shareholders to easily swap shares on a dollar-for-dollar basis for shares in another mutual fund within a mutual fund family. • Exchange Fee – a small charge, typically $5 or $10 per transaction, on a transfer from one fund to another. • Mutual Fund Family – exists when the same management company operates a variety of mutual funds, each with its own investment objectives. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 19 Recordkeeping and Help with Taxes • Confirmation Statements – indicate the number of shares owned and the value of the holdings. • Consolidated Statements – report all of the investor’s holdings and transactions in the mutual fund family. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 20 Beneficiary Designation • Beneficiary Designation – enables the shareholder to name one or more beneficiaries so that the proceeds to go them without going through probate. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 21 Withdrawal Plans • Withdrawal Plans (or Systematic Withdrawal Plans) – available to shareholders who want a periodic income from their mutual fund investments. • You can take your funds out of a mutual fund using one of four methods: – – – – By taking a set dollar amount each month. By cashing in a set number of shares each month. By taking the current income as cash. By taking a portion of the asset growth. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 22 Mutual Fund Transaction Fees • You may be required to pay a transaction fee when you purchase and sell your mutual fund shares • Load funds always charge transaction fees – Sales Charge (or Commission or Load) – assessed by some mutual funds at the time of purchase. – Front-End Load – the commission paid to the salesperson. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 23 Mutual Fund Transaction Fees (continued) • No-Load Funds Sometimes Charge Transaction Fees – No-Load Fund – a mutual fund that does not assess a sales charge at the time of the investment purchase. – Note that the SEC allows funds to be called “no-load” if they assess a “service fee” of 0.25 percent or less when shares are purchased. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 24 Mutual Fund Transaction Fees (continued) • Deferred Load (or Back-End Load) – a sales commission that is imposed only when shares are sold. • Redemption Charge (or Exit Fee) – typically disappears after the investment has been held for six months or a year. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 25 Mutual Fund Expense Charges • Management Fee – an annual assessment to pay the advisors who operate the mutual fund. • 12b-1 Fee (or Distribution Fee) – an annual charge deducted by the fund company from a fund’s assets to pay for advertising, marketing, distribution, and promotional costs. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 26 What’s Best: Load or No-Load? LowFee or High-Fee? • Up-front load charges are costly to the investor in the short run (less than five years), whereas annual 12b-1 charges are very costly over the long run. • Over five-year periods, lower-cost funds always deliver returns better than those offered by higher-cost funds. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 27 Managed Funds or Index Funds? • Managed Funds – professional managers are constantly evaluating and choosing securities using a specific investment approach. • Index Fund – a mutual fund that simply buys and holds the stocks or bonds that constitute a market index. • Unmanaged Funds – managers do not evaluate and select individual securities, but rather buy and hold all the stocks in a particular index. Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 28 Figure 15.3: Balancing Risk and Returns on Mutual Funds Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 29 Interpret Comparative Performance Information Over Time • Consider a fund’s volatility – volatility characterizes a security’s or mutual fund’s tendency to rise or fall in price over a period of time. • Consider a fund’s long- and short-term performance Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 - 30