 |
|

A Complete "How To" Guide for
investing in Stocks, Bonds and Mutual Funds
|
|
You are here:
Investing >
Mutual Funds |

| Mutual Funds
|
-
Mutual Fund Advantages
Choose a mutual fund that will make you
lots of money in the coming years and
start investing right now.
-
History of Mutual Funds
Mutual funds are not an American
invention. The first was started in the
Netherlands in 1822, and the second in
Scotland in the 1880's.
-
Net Asset Value (NAV)
When you invest in a mutual fund, you
purchase shares in the fund at the share
price (the NAV or net asset value) at
the close of that day.
-
Dollar Cost Averaging
As you buy additional blocks of shares,
$50 or $100 at a time, you are taking
advantage of what is known as "dollar
cost averaging".
-
Advice About Choosing a Fund
Even though mutual funds are
professionally managed, there is still a
lot of risk by choosing a fund solely on
the record of its past performance, or
how well it is doing this year.
-
Mutual Fund Ratings
Since 1985, a company named Morningstar
has provided investors with its rating
system, assigning one to five stars to
funds. You will see these stars in all
the mutual fund ads.
-
Evaluating Mutual Fund Investment Risk
All investments have some degree of
risk. But how do you judge the risk of a
mutual fund?
-
Mutual Fund Share Classes
As you become familiar with mutual funds
and their prospectuses, there is
constant reference to "A" shares, "B"
shares etc.
-
Mutual Fund Fees
Mutual funds don’t deduct expenses
directly from your account. Instead,
they take a set percentage (disclosed in
the prospectus) to pay for monthly
expenses such as rent, salaries, etc.,
and profit.
-
The Mutual Fund Prospectus
Every mutual fund publishes a booklet
that tells everything you need to know
about it. This is called a prospectus,
and is supposed to be read before your
money is accepted by the fund company.
-
How important is the manager's length of
experience?
From 1991 to 2000, managers with 10 or
more years at the same fund averaged
14.3% per year after all expenses. Those
with less than 10 years averaged 12.9%.
-
Why is the prospectus hard to
understand?
When you read the prospectus, you will
see lots of gibberish. Find our what to
look for while researching a fund.
-
Mutual Fund Annual Report
Many mutual fund investors fail to read
or understand the annual report that
funds publish and mail to them each
year. Here are some of the basic things
to examine.
-
Comparing Your Fund to the Competition
Learn to compare your mutual fund
investment to other mutual funds
available in different markets.
-
Comparing funds on an after-tax basis
Why is this important? Unless your fund
is held in a tax-free or tax-deferred
account, the funds turnover (percent of
its investment holdings that it changes
during the year) can cost you a lot of
money.
-
Average Return on Investment
People tend to focus on a fund's
historical average and therefore believe
that this is the number they can expect
every year. But hey, this is an AVERAGE.
-
How Not to Pick a Mutual Fund
Avoid making the same investing mistakes
many beginners tend to make.
-
Cashing in Your Fund
One of the hardest things to resist is
the temptation to give up on your mutual
fund because of a poor year, or even a
few bad months.
-
When to Sell Your Fund
There can be good reasons to sell your
fund. Find a list of reason for that
could warrant selling your fund.
-
Mutual Funds and Asset Allocation
Ask any financial planner about
mutual fund investing and they will give
you a lesson on asset allocation. They
will advise you to put part of your
money in a good bond fund, part in a
money market fund that invests in U.S.
treasuries, and the remainder in a stock
market index fund.
-
When To Start a Mutual Fund
Getting started now, not "tomorrow" is
crucial. Hesitation will cost you a lot
of money.
-
Types of Mutual Funds
There many kinds of stock funds, bond
funds, and money market funds. Get an
expert description of the different
types of funds available.
-
Value Stock Funds
Most stock market experts would define a
value stock as one that is priced too
low when you compare its earnings and
book value, per share, to other
companies in the same industry.
-
Growth Stock Funds
Stocks from companies that may seem
over-priced can be great "values" if the
company is growing by leaps and bounds.
But this kind of value is called a
growth stock.
-
Small and Micro-Cap Stocks
Companies whose stock value is under
$100 million are usually referred to as
micro-cap, and called small-cap if the
total value of their stock is between
$100 million and $1 billion.
-
Mid Cap
Mid-cap companies often share the
positive features of larger companies:
established products and services, solid
management, and long-term operating
histories.
-
Large Cap Companies
These are the companies, most belonging
to the S&P 500, whose market
capitalization is over $10 billion. Many
are old, established companies such as
IBM, Ford Motor, and Proctor and Gamble.
-
Income Stock Funds
This is a category that represents
companies that pay a high, regular
dividend.
-
Index Mutual Fund
An index mutual fund is one whose goal
is to match the target index as closely
as possible, whether it is the S&P 500,
Russell 2000, Barra Mid-Cap Value, etc.
-
Enhanced Index Funds
These funds juice up the S&P 500
index by weeding out laggard stocks
while adding faster growing ones.
-
Sector Mutual Funds
So far we've looked at broad categories.
Stocks can also be divided into the
industry type “sector funds”.
-
Stock Market Sectors
Discover a comprehensive list of major
stock market sections or industries.
-
Defensive Stocks
Another group of stocks are called
Defensive and are mostly part of the
consumer non-cyclical group. These are
companies that make things that are
immune to the ups and downs of the
economy, such as tobacco, soap, drugs,
diapers, food and beverages.
-
International Funds
These are mutual funds that invest in
companies from around the world.
Technically, if the fund is a "global"
or "world" fund, then it invests in a
combination of foreign and U.S.
companies.
-
Real Estate Mutual Funds
These funds invest in real estate
investment trusts (reits) that trade on
the NYSE. A reit invests in real estate,
mortgages, or both.
-
Socially Responsible Funds
Invest only in companies who are good
for the environment. They also avoid
tobacco, alcohol, and weapons
manufactures.
-
Balanced Funds
Balanced funds invest part of their
money in stocks and part in bonds and
U.S. treasuries.
-
Tax-Efficient Funds
If your investments are in a
tax-advantaged account such as an IRA or
401k, you want maximum return without
any consideration for tax-impact.
-
Bond Convertible Funds
Invest in bonds and preferred stocks
that are convertible into common shares
at a set conversion ratio within a given
amount of time.
-
Junk Bond Funds
You can look all you want for a mutual
fund with “junk bond” in the fund’s
name, but you won’t find it. That term
is a nickname for bonds issued by
companies with poor credit ratings.
-
Mixtures of Stock Types
Besides the types of funds discussed
so far, there are many other
combinations of stocks. Truly something
for every kind of investor.
-
Closed End Funds
Closed-end funds have an initially set
number of shares, which are then traded
like stocks on the NYSE.
-
Exchange Traded Funds (ETF’s)
Traded on the American Stock Exchange,
ETF’s are “baskets” of stocks
representing a stock market index. They
trade exactly like a regular stock.
-
Stock Picking Strategy
There are services such as Sharebuilder
that let you create your own mutual
fund, picking your own basket of stocks,
for what appears to be only a small fee.
But can you choose what will be the long
term winners better than a seasoned
mutual fund manager?
-
Fund names - What They Really Invest In
This is probably a good time to alert
you to the vast leeway that fund
management is allowed, in choosing how
your money is invested.
-
How to Get Started
Learn what you can start doing today
with mutual fund investing.
-
Where Can I Start Investing with No
Money?
This sounds a little hard to believe,
but yes, there are two mutual fund
companies that will let you sign up with
no money to start, $0.00!
|
|
|
|
|
|