MUTUAL FUNDS and ETFS A Guide for Investors
How Mutual Funds and ETFs Work
How Mutual Funds Work
A mutual fund is an SEC-registered open-end investment
company that pools money from many investors and invests
the money in stocks, bonds, short-term money-market instru-
ments, other securities or assets, or some combination of
these investments. The combined securities and assets the
mutual fund owns are known as its portfolio, which is managed
by an SEC-registered investment adviser. Each mutual fund
share represents an investor’s proportionate ownership of the
mutual fund’s portfolio and the income the portfolio generates.
Investors in mutual funds buy their shares from, and sell/
redeem their shares to, the mutual funds themselves. Mutual
fund shares are typically purchased from the fund directly or
through investment professionals like brokers. Mutual funds
are required by law to price their shares each business day and
they typically do so after the major U.S. exchanges close. This
price—the per-share value of the mutual fund’s assets minus
its liabilities—is called the NAV or net asset value. Mutual funds
must sell and redeem their shares at the NAV that is calculated
after the investor places a purchase or redemption order. This
means that, when an investor places a purchase order for
mutual fund shares during the day, the investor won’t know
what the purchase price is until the next NAV is calculated.
Types of Investment Companies
There are three basic types of investment companies:
Open-end investment companies or open-end
funds—which sell shares on a continuous basis,
purchased from, and redeemed by, the fund (or
through a broker for the fund);
Closed-end investment companies or closed-end
funds—which sell a fixed number of shares at one
time (in an initial public offering) that later trade on
a secondary market; and
Unit Investment Trusts (UITs)—which make a one-
time public offering of only a specific, fixed number
of redeemable securities called units and which will
terminate and dissolve on a date that is specified at
the time the UIT is created.
Mutual funds are open-end funds. ETFs are generally
structured as open-end funds, but can also be struc-
tured as UITs. ETFs operate pursuant to SEC exemptive
orders.