Sunday, June 3, 2012

How Many People Have Ever Heard Of The Words Mutual Funds

By Carol Lena MacOnrow


A mutual fund guide could basically be called a guide to investing in stocks, bonds, and money market securities.

I sometimes tell investors that they should not be afraid to own individual stocks if they are willing to take the time to learn enough about the individual company or stock to make a rational businessman's decision. And don't forget about valuation. Sometimes it is just a lot easier to pick fabulous mutual funds, and let professional money managers make the individual stock selections for you. If you go this route, and for many it is the way to go, than I suggest your big decisions are what sectors you want to invest in, and what are your asset allocations. Sounds like fancy language, but really it is not. It's just plain common sense investing. What is your aversion to risk? Do you want to embrace investment risk, or do you seek to encounter as little risk as possible.

Funds are expensive but most are not. Depending on the amount of money invested, most people cannot find better value for every dollar invested than they can when they invest in mutual funds. While the fund companies generate an expense for their administrative efforts, they almost always come in cheaper than investing individually through a discount broker. With most fees at 1% or less, an investor with just $10,000 to invest could only make 10 trades in 1 year at $10 each to achieve the same cost savings. This tells us that funds are owned by so many different unit holders that the collective pays a reduced fee, not the individual investor.

Make sure the management team hasn't changed by the way. You don't want to pay for fabulous past results only to find out there is a new portfolio manager in town running your mutual fund. Watch out for the fad funds by the way. By the time an entire mutual fund sector is hot, and ripping up the charts with performance, it is too late 90% of the time, for you to be an investor. You don't want start becoming an investor in gold as it passes $1200 per ounce. That is the time you want to be thinking about exit.

It never hurts to do a little homework, have reasonable expectations, pay a low load, or even used index funds, have a long term outlook, and you should be okay. More than that, you should be pleased with the wealth creation process that you have put together for yourself. If you insist on taking all kinds of risk, than you should do it with only about 5% of your investable assets. Most stock analyst will agree that it is a sound financial idea to diversify your stock portfolio with some type of money market investment, such as the Principal Money Market Fund. However, few will make that recommendation to you because they do not study or analyze this type of security investment.

Commodities operate in a little different fashion than stocks. Buying a commodity means you actually own something, or in the future you will own something, whether it be so many bushels of corn, pounds of gold, or barrels of oil. You are dealing with real goods, not the performance of a company. Typically, you are buying a contract for a future buy or sell of these goods. And it is a contract you never expect to complete.




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