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Last Updated: Dec-26-2008
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Best No Load Mutual Funds - Your Online Mutual Funds Directory and Resource Center.

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  • Mutual funds make big purchase in June
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  • If you play or watch sports, you know that a good coach can be worth their weight in gold. But if you play the stock market with mutual funds, can you say the same for a fund manager? These investment coaches are certainly highly paid. But in this report,
  • Getting Going columnist Jonathan Clements debuts his video column. He responds to reader mail about how to hedge against the declining dollar and advises investing 30% of your portfolio in foreign mutual funds. (Oct. 16).
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    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    As with any business, running a mutual fund involves costs, including shareholder transaction costs, investment advisory fees, and marketing and distribution expenses. Funds pass along these costs to investors by imposing fees and expenses.

    Some funds impose "shareholder fees" directly on investors whenever they buy or sell shares. In addition, every fund has regular, recurring, fund-wide "operating expenses." Funds typically pay their operating expenses out of fund assets — which means that investors indirectly pay these costs.

    The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules require funds to disclose both shareholder fees and operating expenses in a "fee table" near the front of a fund's prospectus. The lists below will help you decode the fee table and understand the various fees a fund may impose

    Front-end load

    Sales Charge (Load) on Purchases — the amount you pay when you buy shares in a mutual fund. Also known as a "front-end load," this fee typically goes to the brokers that sell the fund's shares. Front-end loads reduce the amount of your investment. For example, let's say you have $1,000 and want to invest it in a mutual fund with a 5% front-end load. The $50 sales load you must pay comes off the top, and the remaining $950 will be invested in the fund. According to NASD rules, a front-end load cannot be higher than 8.5% of your investment.

    Purchase fee

    Purchase Fee — another type of fee that some funds charge their shareholders when they buy shares. Unlike a front-end sales load, a purchase fee is paid to the fund (not to a broker) and is typically imposed to defray some of the fund's costs associated with the purchase.

    Back-end load

    Deferred Sales Charge (Load) — a fee you pay when you sell your shares. Also known as a "back-end load," this fee typically goes to the brokers that sell the fund's shares. The most common type of back-end sales load is the "contingent deferred sales load" (also known as a "CDSC" or "CDSL"). The amount of this type of load will depend on how long the investor holds his or her shares and typically decreases to zero if the investor holds his or her shares long enough.

     

       
     
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