5 Mutual Fund Fees To Ask About

1. The Expense Ratio – This Ongoing Fee Is In Every Mutual Fund

It costs money to run a mutual fund. Some funds cost more to operate than others. Regardless of the cost, all mutual funds have a fee referred to as an expense ratio, or sometimes called a management fee or an operating expense.

This fee is deducted out of the total assets of the fund before your share price is determined.

Example: Let’s say you own a mutual fund that is valued at $10.00 per share. It has a gross return of 10%, meaning its total investment return was $1.00 per share. If there were no fees, the fund share would be valued at $11.00, but the fund manager deducts 1% in fees, so your actual investment return is .89 cents instead of the full $1.00, and after fees, your share is worth $10.89.

As a general rule:

  • Actively managed funds have higher operating expenses than passive funds or index funds. This is because an actively managed fund is conducting ongoing research trying to determine the best securities to own. This research costs more, but statistics show you don’t get what you pay for.
  • International funds have higher fees than domestic funds. It costs more to purchase investments that are traded outside of the U.S. This higher cost is passed along in the form of higher expense ratios.
  • Small cap funds have higher fees than large cap funds. It costs more to buy and sell small stocks than large ones. This higher cost is passed along in the form of higher expense ratios.
  • Index funds or passively managed funds typically have the lowest fees, and finding these types of funds has been proven to be a strong indicator of good future fund performance.

When comparing fund fees, keep the items above in mind. It doesn’t make sense to compare the fund fee on a U.S. large cap fund to one on an international fund. That is not an apples-to-apples comparison.

2. Sales Charge Or Commission – An Upfront Fee You Pay

When you buy an “A share” mutual fund, you will pay a commission when you purchase the shares. This type of fee is sometimes referred to as sales charge or a “front-end load”. Thus a “no-load” fund has no such upfront fee.

With a front-end load fund if your total investment amount exceeds a threshold amount and you are willing to invest it all into the same fund family you may qualify for what is called a “breakpoint” or a lower upfront fee.

Here’s an example of a front-end load: Let’s say you are buying a fund that is valued at $10.00 per share and has a 5% front-end sales charge or load. You will pay approximately $10.52 for each share purchased, as a 5% sales fee will be added on to the initial purchase price of your shares.

Many financial salespeople are paid by these types of loads or commissions.

3. Redemption Fees – A Fee You Pay When You Sell Shares

When you buy a “B share” mutual fund, if you sell shares of your fund within a specified time frame you will pay a redemption fee, also referred to as a “back-end load”, a contingent deferred sales charge or a surrender charge.

Example: Let’s say you are buying a fund that is valued at $10.00 per share and has a 5% contingent deferred sales charge. If you sell your shares within one year of purchase, you would receive $9.50 per share. Usually, this fee goes down each year, so in year two, it may drop to a 4% fee, in year three, 3%, and so on.

If you own your B share funds for the required amount of time, according to that fund’s schedule, then you will not incur a surrender charge when you sell them.

4. Short Term Trading Fees

Mutual funds are designed to be long-term investments; short-term trading fees have been imposed on some funds to discourage investors from trading in and out of funds. Mutual funds inside your 401(k) account may be subject to short-term trading fees.

Short-term trading fees are imposed when you purchase shares and then sell them again within 30-90 days.

In this scenario, the mutual fund may charge you a fee of 1-3% upon the sale of the recently purchased shares.

5. 12(b)1 Fee, Service Fee, Or Distribution Fee

Many funds have an ongoing service or marketing fee, also called a 12(b)1 fee, which is paid to a financial advisor or financial services company as compensation for marketing the fund.

If you purchase a “C share” mutual fund it will typically have an extra 1% 12(b)1 fee, in addition to an expense ratio. Just like the expense ratio, this service fee will be deducted out of the total fund assets before your share price is determined.

Example: Let’s say you own a C share that is valued at $10.00 per share. It has a gross return for the year of 10%, meaning its total investment return was $1.00 per share. The fund manager deducts 1% in fees, so your actual investment return is .89 cents instead of the full $1.00.

source: wealthforum.com

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