My
View on Mutual Funds Page 1
Part 1: What Mutual Funds Are
By Mo2
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My Vision
I must admit I have a pretty strong opinion on quite a few things in
this world and mutual funds would be one of them. I'm not saying that
you should follow my advice but I'm just giving my advice from my knowledge
and experience here. If that didn't scare you away, please read on.
The topic of Mutual Funds is immense and I will therefore break this
colossal topic down into a few parts. The first part is about what mutual
funds and its costs.
What Mutual
Funds Are
Mutual funds are probably one of the most well known investments. Essentially
a mutual fund is a pool of investments that are held by either a corporation
or trust that is then managed by a professional fund manager. With this
pool of funds, the fund manager invests in all sorts of investments
depending on their style of investing and the type of fund.
For example, if the mutual fund was an index-fund, the fund manager
would strive to mimic the movements of the market, which basically is
all an index fund does, try to get the same return as the index.
Mutual
Fund Advantages
The greatest advantage of mutual funds is diversification. Because mutual
funds are well capitalized in most cases, they can invest in any stock
while keeping commission fees low compared to the regular investor.
Variety
Another advantage is the variety of mutual funds that exist. You can
buy mutual funds that look for value stocks, growth stocks, REIT stocks,
or wind power. It's all there you just need to decide what you like
and the fund manager will take care of the rest trying to produce the
highest return possible.
There are other advantages that make mutual
funds attractive however I feel that these two stand out the most.
Mutual Fund
Disadvantages
Just as how great heroes
have just as great villains, mutual funds have their disadvantages.
The first great disadvantage is the Management Expense Ratio (MER).
The calculation of the MER is
as follows:
(All fees and expenses payable during the year divided by the average
net asset value for the year) x 100
Some see that the professional management
of funds is a great advantage to mutual funds. I agree to some extent
because the fund managers have access to a wealth of information and
their experience and education has achieved them the role of being a
fund manager, which I might add is a formidable accomplishment in itself.
However, the existence of the MER puts even the greatest of fund managers
at a great disadvantage.
Here's Why
"Hey Mo2 here's
$2 billion, invest it."
Yes, I would love someone to say that to me. If you're one of those
beautiful people, you have my e-mail.
Guess what most mutual fund managers invest
in with that amount of money and with all the restrictions that are
placed on them (i.e. maximum short position on stocks)? If you own a
Canadian Equity Mutual Fund, guess what? I'm going to have to invest
in pretty much what every other fund manager invests in, the large capitalization
stocks that are stable over the long term and pay out a decent dividend.
Most mutual fund managers will not deviate
from that formula because their jobs are on the line if they cannot
produce a decent return for the mutual fund relative to the benchmark.
Of course, they will try a variety of things such as invest heavier
in certain stocks or diversify their risk by investing a small portion
is relatively riskier stocks; however, this does very little offset
the deadly blow of the MER.
Chipping Away at Your Return
Yes, that's exactly
what the MER does. If you didn't have to deal with the MER and actually
spent time on your own to do research and invest in individual stocks
by yourself you would save plenty of money. For those of us that aren't
active traders but are normal investors (I'm kind of both so please
don't take offense traders) the usual commission per a 1,000-share equity
(stock) order is around $25-29 per transaction. So double that when
you consider selling it.
The commission fee for active
traders by the way where they must have a certain number of transactions
per quarter is around $9.99. That's the commission fee you see on commercial
and most likely doesn't apply to the average investor.
The
$3,000 Portfolio
Now,
even if you're beginning to start your portfolio and have as little
as $3,000 that's less than 1% to start your investment portfolio. If
you think like Warren Buffet and decide that a person should invest
in only 10 stocks in a lifetime, then you won't have to worry about
the other 1% for selling the stock.
Even if you do sell your stock for an investment portfolio of $3,000
that would only amount to being 2% of your investment over whatever
period of time. And that could be 3-4 years too. Remember, the MER is
an annual expense that is usually around 2.5-3% for a mutual fund depending
on how active (and sometimes greedy) the management is.
Page 2 - Costs and My Vision
Mutual Funds Part 1
Related
Articles
Choosing your Stock Broker
Portfolio Construction
Dollar Cost Averaging Investing
If you
would like to comment on this article or anything on this website, please
feel free to e-mail Mo2. He can be reached at Mo2@Mo2Thinks.com.
Thank you for visiting!