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Mutual Funds General.
Mutual funds are most common type of investment
in North America. With explosion of the number of mutual funds, funds
investor in the 90s came a variety of specialty funds. Instead of using
the capital to hire employees, purchase materials so on the investment
fund purchase a diversified list of stocks, or bonds, or both for their
income potential.
They have been complemented by funds specializing in
- Certain industries;
- Certain commodities;
- Certain marketplace;
- Developed exclusively to real estate investment
or mortgages;
- Futures on stock exchanges.
You can find funds for every objective, taste and
interest. The number of funds is grooving daily.
The main characteristic of the mutual fund is that
the price of the mutual fund's shares has at all time define
relationship to the net asset value of the mutual fund's portfolio. The
mutual fund continuously sells its treasury shares. The result is that
the number of shares and investment capital are constantly changing.
A mutual fund has a simple capital structure.
It has a nominal number of deferred shares (common shares), which are
held by the sponsor of the company; and a number of shares, which are
offered for sale to the public.
Mutual fund shares can be sold to
the public by
- Investment dealers and brokers;
- Bank;
- Trust companies.
There are usually five ways to buy
mutual funds:
- Cash investment - you can buy a number of mutual
fund shares. Most funds offer a discount on the loading fee if the
investment is usually more 25000$
- Reinvestment of dividend - the shareholders can
reinvest their dividend
- Non-contractual saving plan - an investor can open
a small account and then add monthly or quarterly amounts.
- Contractual plan - specified amount each month over
a specific period.
- Withdrawal plan - one time investing in a fund and
then withdraws dividends and some principal amount at regular
intervals.
An investment fund does not guarantee a capital
growth. The value of shares (units) is usually calculated by taking the
total market value of all investments divided by number of units
(shares). So, if a mutual fund succeeds on the market their shareholders
are wealthy otherwise they can loose not only dividends but an invested
capital as well.
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