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The central idea of a mutual fund is to enable investors to pool their money and place it under professional investment management. The manager makes the trades, realizing a gain or loss, and collects the dividend or interest income. The investment proceeds are then passed along to the individual investors. There are more mutual funds then there are individual stocks.
Most mutual funds are open-end funds. This means that at the end of every day, the investment management company sponsoring the fund issues new shares to investors and buys back shares from investors wishing to leave the fund. A mutual fund can also be a closed-end fund. The sponsor of a closed-end fund registers and issues a fixed number of shares at the initial offering, similar to a common stock. Investors then can buy or sell these shares through a stock exchange. The sponsor does not redeem or issue shares after a closed-end fund is launched, so the investor must trade them through a broker. A new innovation, the exchange traded fund (ETF) combines characteristics of both open and closed end mutual funds. An ETF usually tracks a stock index, like an index fund, but can be redeemed on demand for its underlying holdings, eliminating the discounts and premiums that are common with closed-end funds and forcing prices to remain very close to the net asset value (NAV). ETFs are traded throughout the day on a stock exchange, just like closed-end funds.
Mutual funds can invest in many different kinds of securities. The most common are cash, stock, and bonds, but there are hundreds of sub-categories. Stock funds, for instance, can invest primarily in the shares of a particular industry, such as high technology or utilities. These are known as sector funds. Bond funds can vary according to risk (high yield or junk bonds, investment-grade corporate bonds), type of issuers (government agencies, corporations, or municipalities), or maturity of the bonds (short or long term). Both stock and bond funds can invest in primarily US securities (domestic funds), both US and foreign securities (global funds), or primarily foreign securities (international funds). By law, mutual funds cannot invest in commodities and their derivatives or in real estate. (However, there do exist real estate investment trusts, or REITs, which invest solely in real estate or mortgages, and mutual funds are allowed to hold shares in REITs.) A mutual fund may restrict itself in other ways. These restrictions, permissions, and policies are found in the prospectus, which every open-end mutual fund must make available to a potential investor before accepting his or her money.
Most mutual funds' investment portfolios are continually adjusted under the supervision of a professional manager, who forecasts the future performance of investments appropriate for the fund and chooses the ones which he or she believes will most closely match the fund's stated investment objective. This is called active management, in contrast to indexing, in which a fund's assets are managed to closely approximate the performance of a particular published index. Because the composition of an index changes less frequently than the condition of the market, an index fund manager makes fewer trades, on average, than does an active fund manager. For this reason, index funds generally have lower expenses than actively-managed funds, and typically incur fewer capital gains which must be passed on to shareholders. The majority of actively managed funds usually only match the performance of the index fund, but since they have higher costs they then underperform the index funds. Three fourths of all mutual funds underperform the S and P 500 index. This means the majority of the professional managers can't execute a better stock picking strategy then simply buying the 500 largest companies equally. For this reason, many advisors strongly suggest avoiding mutual funds.
Mutual funds are corporations under US law, but they are subject to a special set of regulatory, accounting, and tax rules. Unlike most other types of corporations, they are not taxed on their income as long as they distribute substantially all of it to their shareholders. Also, the type of income they earn is often unchanged as it passes through to the shareholders. Mutual fund distributions of tax-free municipal bond income are also tax-free to the shareholder. Taxable distributions can either be ordinary income or capital gains, depending on how the fund earned it.
You can buy many mutual funds directly from the fund sponsor. These are called "no-load" funds, because the issuer does not charge a sales commission. Some discount brokers will sell no-load funds, some for a flat transaction fee, some for no fee at all. Load funds are sold through intermediaries such as brokers, financial planners, and other types of registered representatives who charge a commission for their services.
Picking a mutual fund from among the thousands offered is not easy. The following is just a rough guide, with some common pitfalls.
In September 2003, the US mutual fund industry was beset by a scandal in which major fund companies permitted and facilitated late trading and market timing.
In the United Kingdom the term "mutual fund" may be confusing due to the exitance of building societies and mutual life companies which in law are owned by their members and which have no share holders to distribute profits to and consequently are referred to as "mutuals" Collectively managed funds are referred to by type, and the following are the princiapl ones are available:
Tax favoured products such as Pensions or Individual Savings Accounts may include any of the above, although separate Pension funds and (subject to involved differences) Life Insurance funds exist with their own legislative control and tax treatment.