14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Dr. Scott Brown, Ph.D.
Many investors think that investing in mutual funds is free.
What nonsense! Funds collect more than $50 billion a year in
fees from investors. That is truly a ton of money. The first way
you get hosed in a mutual fund is due to high fees charged.
These fees can dramatically reduce your returns over time!
The way that these fees are deducted automatically from a fund’s
returns makes them invisible because you never see an invoice or
have to write a check. If you invest $10,000.00 in a domestic
stock mutual fund with an expense ratio of 2% and a sales load
of 3%, and let’s imagine that you get annual returns of 7.5% for
twenty years, your money would almost triple to $27,508.00.
The bad news is that you would have lost $14,970 in fees and
foregone earnings over the twenty years. Yikes…that really
hurts! Why not just bypass the system and buy your own stocks as
I teach finance students and home study investors?
These funds are also sold and managed on pure hype, short term
trading, and with key information withheld from the public. All
of these factors I teach finance students and investors to
avoid! The industry confuses investors by focusing on past
performance, which should not be a factor to consider. Many
mutual funds are able to cheat the public with excessive fees
because investors don’t understand how these big costs destroy
their profit. Mutual funds have no interest in educating
investors because it is easier to hoodwink the ignorant!
Don’t put your trust in mutual funds unless they are fully
indexed. Indexing means that the mutual fund simply uses a
computer to buy and sell stocks in the mutual fund portfolio so
as to mimic the composition of a major stock market index like
the S&P 500. This means that there is no fund manager sucking
out needless fees. A good example is the first fully indexed
mutual fund called the Vanguard 500 (VFINX) which is also now
the largest of its kind.
About the author:
About Author :
: Dr. Scott Brown, Ph.D., the Wallet Doctor, is
a successful investor. Dr. Brown holds a Ph.D. in finance. The
Wallet Doctor is sought after for investment advice and
coaching. For more information visit Dr. Brown’s site at
www.BonanzaBase.com or sign up for his investment tips at
www.WalletDoctor.com