Mutual Funds For Dummies. Eric Tyson

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as much as you would if you’d been in some good mutual funds).

       It’s highly unlikely that everyone in the group is in the same tax situation. Thus, the club’s investments may work for some members’ tax situations but not for others’.

       Beware of stockbrokers (and others trolling for prospective clients) who’ve been known to participate in investment clubs and volunteer as leaders. Although their participation may be harmless, more often than not, these brokers have a hidden agenda to reel in new business clients.

      Consider forming a financial reading club and discussion group rather than an investment club. You can get together and discuss financial periodicals, books, and investment strategies. This way, you can advance your level of financial knowledge; find out about new resources from others; and enjoy the fun, camaraderie, and other benefits that come from doing things in a group.

      Better yet, join a bowling league or a softball team and leave the investing to fund managers!

      I’ve noticed a distinct contrast between the sexes on this issue (which is backed up by research). Perhaps because of differences in how people are raised, testosterone levels, or whatever, men tend to have more of a problem taming their egos and admitting that they’re better off turning the stock and bond selection over to a pro.

      

Before you set out to compete in the investment world, get smarter and wiser. The latest edition of my book Investing For Dummies (Wiley) explains how to analyze company financial statements and compare and select stocks and bonds as well as to use the best investment research sources such as Value Line. Also, don’t overlook the opportunity to piggyback all the research and knowledge of the best money managers. By using the lists of best funds recommended in this book, you can use those funds’ reports to figure out what stocks and bonds some of the most talented money managers in the world are buying. (Note: The listing of a fund’s portfolio may be several months out of date as funds are only required to report their holdings quarterly.)

      Exchange-Traded Funds and Other Fund Lookalikes

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Making sense of exchange-traded funds

      

Understanding unit investment trusts

      

Creating your own customized funds

      The hallmarks of the investment and economic system are constant change, innovation, and choice. Index mutual funds, which track a particular market index (see Chapter 10) and the best of which feature low costs, have been around for decades.

      The best exchange-traded funds (ETFs) represent a twist on index funds — ETFs trade like stocks do and offer some potential advantages over funds. However, some cheerleaders pitching ETFs gloss over drawbacks to ETFs and fail to disclose their agenda in promoting ETFs.

      Some other fund wannabes compete for your investment dollars, too. This chapter offers the straight scoop on these alternatives.

      For many years after their introduction in the 1970s, index mutual funds got little respect and money. Various pundits and those folks with a vested financial interest in protecting the status quo, such as firms charging high fees for money management, heaped criticism on index funds. (As I explain in Chapter 13, index funds replicate and track the performance of a particular market index, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500 index of 500 large-company U.S. stocks.) Critics argued that index funds would produce subpar returns. Investors who’ve used index funds have been quite happy to experience their funds typically outperforming about 70+ percent of the actively managed funds over extended time periods.

      In recent years, increasing numbers of financial firms have developed exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Most ETFs are, essentially, index funds with one major difference: They trade like stocks on a stock exchange. The first ETF was created and traded on the American Stock Exchange in 1993 and tracked the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. Now thousands of ETFs trade, comprising about $7 trillion — a large sum indeed — which is about 26 percent of the total invested in mutual funds.

      Before you decide to invest in ETFs, take a moment to read this section. It explains the advantages and disadvantages of investing in ETFs and helps you wade through the many ETFs to find the best ones for you.

      Understanding ETF advantages

      Like index funds, the promise of the best ETFs is low management fees. I say “promise” because when evaluating ETFs, you must remember that the companies creating and selling ETFs, which are mostly large Wall Street investment firms, are doing it to make a healthy profit for their firms. Although the best index funds charge annual fees of about 0.1 percent (and some even less), the vast majority of ETFs actually charge fees much greater than that.

      I compare the best index funds with the best ETFs (which do have low expense ratios) in the section “Identifying the best ETFs,” later in this chapter.

      In addition to possible slightly lower expenses, the best ETFs have one possible additional advantage over traditional index funds: Because ETFs may not be forced to redeem shares to cash and recognize taxable gains (which can happen with an index fund), they may be tax friendlier for nonretirement account investors. (Note: ETFs do have to sometimes sell and buy new holdings as adjustments are made to the underlying index that an ETF tracks.)

      Eyeing ETF drawbacks

      Meanwhile, some of the drawbacks to ETFs include the following:

       Three-day

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