Mutual Funds and ETFs Maybe All You’ll Ever Need
Funds give us easy access to stocks and bonds
Mutual Funds: An Excellent Choice
Mutual funds are the investment of choice for most
Americans, and for good reason. Mutual funds give
us cheap and easy access to stocks and bonds (and
other types of assets, such as gold) to increase our
wealth. Over time, mutual funds can help us multiply
our savings for such goals as retirement, buying a
house or paying for college tuition much faster than if
we kept our money in a bank account. Here’s how they
work, and why they work so well:
Mutual funds combine the money of many inves-
tors. Most funds have many thousands of investors,
and all of their money adds up to hundreds of millions,
and sometimes even billions, of dollars to invest.
With all that money, a fund can invest in dozens
or even hundreds of securities. If you own just a few
stocks, for example, and one of the companies gets in
trouble and its stock drops, you could lose a big chunk
of your money. But by spreading your money (called
diversifying) among many stocks, one failure will not
have a big impact. The same holds true for bonds and
other types of assets.
Most investors wouldn’t be able to afford the cost
of buying so many securities. Such diversification
would be very expensive if you tried to do it on your
own. Buying and selling small numbers of stocks
would involve paying high commissions. But because
a mutual fund trades large blocks of stocks, the cost
of trading is low.
Low cost to start. Some funds accept as little as
$250 to open an account. More typically, minimums
range from $1,000 to $2,500. Once you open an ac-
count, you can usually add as little as $100 at a time.
As we’ll see a bit later, exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
let you in for even less.
When you buy mutual funds, you’re also buying
the skills of the people who manage those funds.
Choosing among the thousands of stocks and bonds
available is a task that most people don’t have the
time, the interest or, frankly, the skill to do. Mutual
fund managers do the choosing for us.
Funds help you achieve long-term goals
Automatic reinvestment of earnings. Dividends
paid by stocks in the fund’s portfolio, interest from
bonds and capital gains earned by selling securities
can be automatically reinvested for you in additional
fund shares. Reinvesting earnings is a critical element
in any long-term investment plan.
For all these reasons, mutual funds are one of
the best vehicles for achieving long-term goals.
According to the Investment Company Institute (ICI),
the fund industry’s trade group, more than 44% of
American households own mutual funds. As investors,
your challenge is to choose among the thousands of
mutual funds available. This publication is designed
to help you do just that.
The Different Types of Funds
Before we discuss all the different things funds invest
in, look at the four main forms mutual funds come in.
Index funds. These are relatively simple funds that
aim to track indexes, or broad baskets, of different
securities. They are not actively managed by experts
trying to beat the market; instead, their goal is to
match the market. Consider funds that track Standard
& Poor’s 500-stock index, which measures the
performance of 500 large U.S. companies. Many
funds are designed to mimic the S&P 500, which over
long periods of time has returned nearly 11% per year,
on average. Other index funds mimic other bench-
marks. These include stocks of small U.S. companies,
different types of foreign stocks, assorted segments
of the foreign and domestic bond market, and indus-
tries such as energy and health care.
Actively managed funds. These funds employ pro-
fessionals who, within the parameters laid out in the
funds’ charters, choose from among thousands of
securities in an attempt to deliver the best possible
results. These managers and analysts use a wide
variety of strategies. For example, when choosing
stocks, some managers will thoroughly research com-
panies in an attempt to determine which will succeed
based on factors such as products, competition, sales
and profits. Other managers will look at sweeping
economic factors and pick companies in the industries
that they believe will do best in their big-picture view
of things.
Exchange-traded funds. Exchange-traded funds are
a cross between index funds and stocks. Like index