Archive for November, 2008

Investing In Bonds and Bond Mutual Funds Can Be A Good Deal.

Sunday, November 30th, 2008
Darren Mclaughlin asked:


Most people think of investing in Bonds as being a dry subject, and to a degree, they are right. However, boring can sometimes be a good thing, especially when it comes to investments. Too much “excitement” in your portfolio can lead to undue stress, so a diet rich in bonds and bond mutual funds can help smooth out the rough edges in a portfolio made up mostly of common stocks.

Bonds are generally considered to be less risky than stocks, but they are not without peril in their own right. The risk in a bond is directly related to the issuing company, and the type of debt instrument. Depending on the type of debt issued, and what underlying assets are involved, certain bond investments can be as risky or more risky than investing in stocks. But there’s good news: with a higher risk generally comes a greater return.

Bonds tend to be less flexible to trade than common shares, so most individual investors will end up investing a a bond mutual fund. This has many advantages for the beginning investor, not the least of which is that she can rely on the investment experience of a firm that specializes in analyzing the companies, and their capability of repaying their notes.

The biggest risk associated with bonds is referred to as the interest rate risk. This term refers to changes in the market interest rates, which have a direct bearing on bond returns. Fixed-income securities, in general, move inversely with the changes in interest rates. What this means is that during a period of rising interest rates, like the current climate in the U.S. in 2006, people holding bonds will end up seeing declining bond returns. This will affect long-term issues the most.

In fact, the longer the time to maturity, the greater the risk of interest rate erosion becomes. For this reason, careful pruning of a bond portfolio becomes of greatest interest to the fund manager. One technique bond mutual funds use is staggering maturity dates so that they have less risk based on any one scenario. The great size of the funds allow them to do this easily and quickly.

The biggest risk for any bond holder is the risk that the company will default before making its’ scheduled payments. This is directly related to how credit worthy the company is, and their capacity and will to repay their debts. Companies with lower credit ratings have to pay higher interest rates, just like consumers in the same boat. The worse the credit, the higher the interest rates to bond holders have to be in order to attract investment dollars. Companies with excellent credit ratings pay a much lower cost for capital, which is one of the reasons they have superior credit in the first place!

Whenever considering an investment in a bond, make sure first and foremost that the company has an excellent rating from Standard and Poors or Moody’s. This will ensure they have the capacity to pay back your loan to them over the entire duration of the bond contract.



How (not) to Buy Mutual Funds

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Ulli G. Niemann asked:


When it comes to mutual funds, there is a lot more to success than just finding a good one. Sad investment stories like the following are all too common. I hope my sharing it with you will help you avoid making the same devastating financial mistake one of my former clients made.

This story begins during the height of the investment madness in 2000, just prior to the bear market. I had been managing an IRA account for “Bob” for around six years, with a better than average record of success. So I was surprised when Bob sheepishly called in July, 2000 to let me know he was transferring his IRA account, which had done particularly well during our latest Buy cycle going into the year 2000.

However, his tax preparer, a long time personal friend of Bob’s wife’s, was now also offering investment services, having recently received his Registered Representative’s license.

Fast forward to the end of September. It had become increasingly clear to me that the Bull market had run its course. So, in accordance with the Sell signal from our trend tracking methodology, we sold all of our mutual fund positions on October 13, 2000 and went 100% into money market. (See my article “How we eluded the Bear in 2000” at http://www.successful-investment.com/articles12.htm). From our safe haven we watched the market crash and burn, causing most other investors to sustain double digit losses eventually reaching as high as 50 - 60% of their assets.

In 2002 Bob unexpectedly stopped by my office. As it turned out, things had not gone well at all with his IRA investments. As most advisors would have done, his tax preparer/advisor had quickly moved all of Bob’s assets into a variety of “load funds.”

Of course, being newly licensed he was clueless (as were many licensed advisors) as to market behavior or analysis of any kind. The end result was that Bob’s portfolio lost in excess of 50% over the next 2 years. (Not to gloat, but my clients’ losses in the same period were non-existent.)

Unfortunately, the degree of loss Bob sustained was experienced by many investors who did not follow a disciplined and methodical approach.

What I find particularly distasteful is that Bob’s tax preparer misused his position of trust. He made financial decisions that he was not qualified to make, though his license implied that he did know enough to make them. So now we know what a piece of paper is worth.

This is no different than letting a newly graduated medical student with a fresh MD behind his name perform heart surgery. Or, hiring a new MBA grad to Chief Financial Officer of a Fortune 500 company. Yet the financial services industry allows someone to get a license (after a fairly short course) and to immediately start making incredibly important and far reaching financial decisions for anyone he or she can sell their service to.

This is a worrisome trend in this industry. A CPA friend confirmed that he has been approached many times by firms wanting him to offer investment services.

Why? It’s easy money! Accountants and tax professionals have a great business base. They are in a unique position of trust, because of the information their clients disclose to them. Whether they are employed by a company or they maintain an individual practice, there is probably no other person (other than your spouse) who knows as many intimate details of your financial life as your accountant/tax preparer.

To abuse this trust for personal gain—no matter how noble the motive may appear—is a total conflict of interest and a huge betrayal.

The bear market of 2000 has shown that investing must be a disciplined endeavor. Even most professionals have failed to recognize this. What busy accountant, in the middle of tax season, can put the necessary time and attention to a volatile investment market that may require action at a moment’s notice?

As for Bob, he’s still with his accountant, and in the same investments that brought his portfolio down. He’s hoping for a miracle recovery. As of this writing, the stock market is engaged in something of an upswing and Bob, I’m sure, is getting his hopes up that he will recover some of his losses. However, I shudder to think that this rally may come to an end and the bear market resumes. Where will Bob be then?

At 58 years old Bob is still playing Russian roulette with his retirement. He’s apparently unable to make a decision to move to someone who has the ability to make sense of market trends and the discipline to follow the signals they communicate. This is a decision that will have a profound affect on his financial future—and will determine whether his story has a happy or sad ending.



What are mutual fund loads?

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
Michael Saville asked:


Loads are the most talked about fees that mutual funds charge. A “load” on a mutual fund is just another way of saying that the fund charges a sales commission for purchase, sale, or both. There are funds that charge loads and there are funds that do not charge loads (known as “load funds” and “no load funds” respectively).

Front-end loads are sales commissions that are paid up front at the time of your purchase. So, if you give a fund a $10,000 investment and it charges a front-end load of 5%, then the fund will take 5% of your investment (that’s $500) and pocket it right away. Only what is left over after the load has been deducted will be invested into the fund (in this example, only $9,500 is invested in the fund from your initial $10,000 investment)

Back-end loads charge their sales commissions when you sell (or “redeem”) your shares. So, when you go to redeem your shares in a fund with a back-end load you will end up receiving whatever money the shares are worth minus the sales commission.

Mutual funds charge management fees in order to pay for the management services used to run the fund. In other words, these fees are used to pay the salaries of the fund’s managers and analysts. Management fees usually do not amount to more than one percent of the fund’s assets, and they are significantly lower for passively-managed funds, such as index funds, than for actively-managed ones. You should remember that a high management fee in no way guarantees a more skilful management team.

Front loads can be reduced if you are investing or planning to invest a certain amount of money. The load reduction schedules are called “break-points.” For example, with most fund companies if you are investing over $100,000 or plan to within the next 13 months, you will get a 1% reduction on the front load. The more you invest, the greater the reduction in the load. For some fund companies the break-point reduction begins at $50,000 over 13 months, and with many funds, if you invest over $2 million there is no front load.

If you do not have $50,000 or $100,000 to invest over the next 13 months, you can still earn a reduction on the front load, through “rights of accumulation.” Under accumulation rules you will receive fee reductions on the front load when your total investments with one fund family have grown past the break points. Therefore, if you only have $20,000 to invest today, that’s OK, someday soon it will grow past the $50,000 or $100,000 initial break-point and you will be eligible for the load discount on your further investments.

The turnover ratio for a mutual fund can provide you with useful information about how expensive a fund is and how it is managed. Turnover ratios measure the amount of trading activity in the fund’s portfolio. They are calculated by taking all of the fund’s sales for a specified period of time (usually one year) and dividing by the fund’s total assets. This number tells you how much the fund’s portfolio has changed.

You probably will want to exercise caution when investing in a fund with a high turnover ratio. High turnover means that the fund’s manager is buying and selling very often, and, since every sale and every purchase involves a commission, this means that funds with high turnover ratios often have high expenses. Some experts recommend focusing on funds whose turnover ratio is less than 50%.



The Many Places Where you Can Mutual Fund Quotes

Thursday, November 20th, 2008
Muna wa Wanjiru asked:


Mutual fund quotes will help you to understand the ways in which your stock portfolio can be changed for the better. You will see many different financial reviews like the Morningstar even on the internet that can provide you with the information from the day’s quotes.

To find the various mutual fund quotes you need to have an understanding of what these are really like. The way that your stock can be affected by these quotes will need to be looked at too. In the mutual fund quotes you will find lots of information that will help you in every area of your mutual funds.

You will also find the information that is provided about fees and prices that a mutual fund company charges to be very helpful. By knowing these prices you can avoid getting into lots of problems. The mutual fund quotes are constantly changing due to various fluctuations in the market. As a result of this you will not be able to find a consistent quote for each day.

There are many places where you can however receive the current information that you need about mutual fund quotes. The USA.com web site has a section where you can find the day’s quote with the least amount of trouble. To get the stock information that you need you will have to type in the stock or mutual fund name in the window which will access this information. Alternatively you can use the ticker symbol which will also display the mutual fund that you are looking for.

With these types of mutual fund quotes web sites you can find stock quotes for more than one mutual fund or stock. You will also be able to see the how a company’s family stock quotes are doing for the day. There are also various selection boxes where you have the ability of refining your search. With these boxes you can choose to get the information that you need very quickly.

For the investor who needs information about how to diversify their stock portfolio, the mutual fund quote is the best way. By accessing this information you can then choose to spend your money on the stocks that will help you in getting a good profit. The mutual fund quotes are the best way for a new investor to get up to the minute investment tips.

Use the information wisely as you will learn all of the best funds and how to make them work for you. With mutual fund quotes you have the means at hand to make your dreams of wealth come true.



What’s the difference between variable annuity sold by mutual funds and simple income fund?

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008
Grassroots asked:


Aren’t annuities from mutual fund companies based on their mutual funds?

No Load Mutual Funds or Exchange Traded Funds (etfs)?

Thursday, November 13th, 2008
Ulli G. Niemann asked:


If you are fed up with early redemption charges and ever increasing mutual fund management fees on top of bad-performing fund managers, read on. There is a quiet revolution going on in the no-load mutual fund industry and you, the individual investor, may benefit from it greatly.

I am referring to Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), which have been around for years, but have grown tremendously since their inception. There are currently over 100 choices with around $10 billion in assets.

In a nutshell, an ETF is a specific kind of no-load mutual fund that you might consider to be a basket of stocks. ETFs are diversified like mutual funds, only they trade like stocks. They are cheap to trade (as low as $8.00) and don’t hit you with any short-term redemption fees. And they offer investing opportunities across the board.

ETFs track every index under the sun including the S&P 500, the Nasdaq 100, The Russell 2000 and many others. Available through any discount broker, they basically fall into one of three categories: broad-based U.S. indexes, sectors and international.

The have esoteric names such as iShares, StreetTracks, HOLDRs and SPYDRs. The difference is in the index they are tracking and the company marketing them. You will see big name companies offering them, like the American Stock Exchange, Barclay’s Global Investors, Vanguard, and State Street Global Investors.

In my newsletter I track the currently most appropriate ETFs for you to consider. For more detailed information you can visit these web sites:

www.nasdaq.com

www.amex.com

www.ishares.com

In addition to inexpensive trades and no short-term redemption fees, how else can ETFs save you money vs. no load mutual funds? One way is on their annual management fees. That fee for ETFs is in the area of 0.45% vs. 1.5% on average for no load mutual funds. The fees charged by discount brokers are so low they almost can be disregarded, usually less than 0.1% of the transaction.

For example, I have used ETFs for some managed account clients during my last Buy cycle, which started on 4/29/03, and paid $27 for a $28,000 order — and that wasn’t even with the cheapest discount broker.

So, if these ETFs are so great, why hasn’t your broker or financial planner recommended them to you? Simple! Brokers, and those advisors working on commissions, don’t make money on ETFs; no commissions up front or hidden on the back end. It’s simply not in their interest to promote them.

With all the positives for the investor, there is one disadvantage, which may not be applicable to you unless you are a hot shot no load mutual fund picker. It is that in any given economic environment really super performing mutual funds can outperform the indexes, but an ETF can never outperform the index it’s tied to. You would need to look at your own investment record to know whether this is a downside for you.

Here’s a real life example from my advisory practice. My trend tracking indicator signaled a Buy on 4/29/03. Based on my momentum indicators I chose 5 no load mutual funds and 4 ETFs. Over the following 3 months my ETFs gained anywhere from +10.02% to +22.36%, while my no load mutual funds gained from +9.15% to +36.35%. If you’re fortunate enough to make a superior selection you will outperform an ETF. Of course, that presumes you picked a very successful fund as compared to only a moderately successful ETF.

A word of caution! Just because ETFs are cheap and easy to buy doesn’t mean they will guarantee you a profit. You can lose money with them just as easily as you do with no-load mutual funds. You still need to make sure you have a disciplined methodology in place to help you get into and out of the market. If you don’t, you’re gambling no matter what you invest in.

Having gotten the disclaimer out of the way, hopefully these insights into ETFs will broaden your perspective on ways you can prosper in your investments.



What is the cheapest way to buy mutual funds other than the fund itself?

Sunday, November 9th, 2008
Cebuguys asked:


All companies I know i.e. Fidelity, Scottrade,
E-trade charge fees…selling/purchase of mutual funds. Which one is the best and least expensive?

All About Mutual Fund Investments

Friday, November 7th, 2008
KAMS asked:


Definition

One definition of Mutual fund states that they are mutually admitted assets invested in different securities. Shareholders are issued bonds as grounds of their control and benefit proportionately in the earnings of the fund.

Various mutual fund options

One of the vital factors that an individual must study when looking at various mutual fund options is that if their money should be an actively managed fund or an indexed fund. All assets include individual stocks, but an actively managed fund will modify these stocks on a regular basis in an endeavor to acquire as much profit as possible. Indexed assets are intermeshed around specific index containing a good cross section of the stocks within this index. The shares are rarely traded and the performance is usually indicates the sole performance of the index. While it is wise to consider the gains form certain sectors, you also should be cautious about sectors that can be adversely affected by a single factor.

Some of the benefits of mutual fund

As in any other investment opinions differ, some suggest that mutual funds do not have a diverse investment potential, whereas other argue that there are a number of advantages in mutual funds.

Mutual funds adapt a strategy to invest funds in various investments, which is the key to high profits. As mutual funds do not compel clients to invest big money, the low investment capital encourages even the small investor to utilize the opportunity to earn high profits. Purchasing mutual funds certificates or selling them is very easy, which makes it convenient for every type of investor. As mutual funds are managed by professionals with good experience in investments, the chances of high profit is greater than in other investments made by an individual.

Safety concerns

As far as mutual funds are concerned safety of the investments are not guaranteed. Moreover the performance of the mutual fund highly depends on the expertise of the managing professionals. With no assurance of guaranteed profits and possibilities of losing money in case of major change in economy, mutual funds only become a secondary or tertiary option for long term investors. However, most short term investors have gained much by investing in the mutual funds only at their own risk.

Securities and Exchange Commission which regulates the mutual funds ensures that all mutual funds are set up and run according to the rules of the government. The commission also sees to that there is a certain degree of transparency between the mutual funds and the investors. It also ensures that other costs and fees of the mutual funds are properly documented so that it gives the investor a crystal clear picture of their investments.







How do TIPS mutual funds correlate with stock market, or differ from individually purchased TIPS?

Friday, November 7th, 2008
mcnb asked:


I understand how TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities) work when purchased from the Treasury, but how do they work when purchased as a mutual fund such as Vanguard’s VIPSX. Unlike individually-owned, I know I don’t get a face-value when held to maturity, but are the funds a good way to hedge against inflation? What would cause the share price to go up/down (in general)?