Tips on Investing in Mutual Funds

Tips on Investing in Mutual Funds

May 28, 2012 Monday

Millions of investors have come to rely on mutual funds as their primary investments. If you are thinking of investing in a mutual fund, you should remember that they are only one of the many types of investments and that, as with any investment, you should know and understand the nature and risks of mutual funds and options available to you before you invest any of your money.

You can earn money out of a fund in basically three ways. First, a fund may receive income in the form of dividends and interest on the securities it owns which it pays to its shareholders in the form of dividends. Second, the price of the securities a fund owns may increase. When a fund sells a security that has increased in price, the fund has a capital gain. At the end of the year, most funds distribute these capital gains (minus any capital losses) to investors. Third, if a fund does not sell but holds on to securities that have increased in price, the value of its shares (NAV) increases.

But before you invest it is better to do some background work. The following are some of the tips which are to be followed while investing in mutual funds :

Know Yourself :


Before you invest, decide whether the goals and risks of any fund you are considering are a good fit for you. You take risks when you invest in any mutual fund. You may lose some or all of the money you invest (your principal) because the securities held by a fund go up and down in value. What you earn on your investment also may go up or down.

Establish Your Benchmarks :


Be clear in how you will measure the performance of the fund. If it is a dedicated fund like say pharma, FMCG etc. then its performance can be measured only against those particular indices. A small cap fund's performance cannot be measured against the BSE Sensex performance. So be clear what is the profile of the fund and what will its performance be compared to.

Do Your Home Work :


There are sources of information that you should consult before you invest in mutual funds. The most important of these is the prospectus of the fund you are considering. The prospectus is the fund's selling document contains information about costs, risks, past performance, and the fund's investment goals. Request a prospectus and read the prospectus before you invest.

The Annual Report of the fund is another source of information. Look at "fee table," where the fund shows what it's charging you.

Also once you invest in a fund track it. If you have not recently examined the prospectus for a fund you own, you should monitor your investment by obtaining and reading the most recent prospectus. Careful reading of quarterly and annual reports is also necessary to keep up with changes in your investment.

Don’t Get Taken In By Past Performance :


A fund's past performance is not as important as you might think. Advertisements, rankings, and ratings tell you how well a fund has performed in the past. But studies show that the future is often different. This year's "number one" fund can easily become next year's below average fund. Although past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance, volatility of past returns is a good indicator of a fund's future volatility.

Compare The Funds On Total Return


Check the fund's total return. Included in the computation are distributions paid to investors, capital gains distributions and unrealized capital gains and losses. Since all fund activity which has an effect on net asset value is represented, this measure provides a picture of performance which is more complete than yield. You will find it in the Financial Highlights, near the front of the prospectus. Total return measures increases and decreases in the value of your investment over time, after subtracting costs. See how total return has varied over the years. The Financial Highlights in the prospectus show yearly total return for the most recent 10-year period. An impressive 10-year total return may be based on one spectacular year followed by many average years. Looking at year-to-year changes in total return is a good way to see how stable the fund's returns have been.

Yield :


Yield is the income generated over a specified time period divided by the fund's current price per share. This is a measure of mutual fund performance, which is figured by dividing the income generated (dividends, capital gains distribution, etc.) per share for a specific time period by the fund's current price per share. For example if, during a year, a single share of a fund had paid income totaling Re.1 and its share price was Re.10, the annual yield for that year would be figured by dividing 1 by 10, which equals one tenth, or a yield of 10%.

Costs :


Costs are important because they lower your returns. A fund that has a sales load and high expenses will have to perform better than a low-cost fund, just to stay even with the low-cost fund. Find the fee table near the front of the fund's prospectus, where the fund's costs are laid out. You can use the fee table to compare the costs of different funds. The fee table breaks costs into two main categories: 1. Sales loads and transaction fees (paid when you buy, sell, or exchange your shares), and 2.Ongoing expenses (paid while you remain invested in the fund).

Sales Loads :


Sales charges on mutual funds are often referred to as the "load." Loads can be classified as front-end and back-end. You pay the front-end load when you purchase shares, as in the example cited above. You pay the back-end load when you redeem your shares. No-load funds do not charge sales loads. They sell their shares to investors without a direct sales charge. However even no-load funds have ongoing expenses, however, such as management fees. When a mutual fund charges a sales load, it usually pays for commissions to people who sell the fund's shares to you, as well as other marketing costs.

Ongoing Expense :


These are expenses as a percentage of the fund's assets, generally for the most recent fiscal year and basically include the management fee (which pays for managing the fund's portfolio), along with any other fees and expenses. High expenses do not assure superior performance. Higher expense funds do not, on average, perform better than lower expense funds. Note carefully any difference in expenses as even a small variation can make a big difference in the value of your investment over time. Check the fee table to see if any part of a fund's fees or expenses has been waived. If so, the fees and expenses may increase suddenly when the waiver ends (the part of the prospectus after the fee table will tell you by how much). Many funds allow you to exchange your shares for shares of another fund managed by the same adviser. The first part of the fee table will tell you if there is any exchange fee.

Risk :


It is quite difficult to compare a fund's risk adjusted return. But there are a couple of ways to do so. A fund's Sharpe ratio essentially shows you how much return the fund earned for each unit of risk that it took, and it's easy to compare different funds against each other this way. Lots of websites will display a fund's Sharpe ratio, usually under a category called "Modern Portfolio Statistics." There's also Morningstar risk, which is a variation of the Sharpe measure based on how often a fund underperformed Treasury bills. And there's beta, which shows how much the fund moves relative to the volatility of the market. But ultimately the real risk is you: If your fund goes down a lot, will you sell? If it goes up, will you buy more then? Most of the risk of investing isn't in your investments, it's in you.

Investment Philosophy :


You can get a clearer picture of a fund's investment goals and policies by reading its annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. Whether a fund believes in value investing, or is aggressive in its style of investing etc. All these have a bearing on the performance of the fund.

Size of the Fund Family :


The size of a fund's family does matter. In large fund families moving from one type of fund to another is easier. For example, the market is showing bearish signs and you want to get out of your stock fund and into a money market fund. This transaction would most likely be cheaper and easier within the same fund family. Also fund families generally waive load fees when switching funds if you originally paid a comparable load. This policy of switching from one load fund to another has also been used to reduce tax obligations. Large fund families can spread out their normal operating costs. For example, a large fund family can have a bigger research department than smaller ones at a lower cost. Economies of scale usually favor the 'big guys'.

Size of the Fund :


Bigger is usually better. The bigger funds can diversify better, attract better talent and have access to more information. However, if the fund's investment style focuses on small-capitalization stocks, bigger isn't always better. The success of many small-cap stock funds often depends on their ability to move in and out of holdings quickly. Larger small-cap funds, especially those that have ballooned recently, can't always achieve the same gains. In fact, some small-cap funds are so large they drastically affect the stock prices of companies they buy and sell.

Some Points to Consider :


Mutual funds are not guaranteed or insured by any bank or government agency. Even if you buy through a bank and the fund carries the bank's name, there is no guarantee. Mutual funds always carry investment risks. Some types carry more risk than others. The fund's portfolio has investment risk directly related to the securities it contains as well as to general market and business conditions. For example, an aggressive growth fund, because the prices of securities in its portfolio are more volatile, is generally riskier than an income fund, which may invest in conservative stocks and bonds whose prices do not fluctuate greatly but that pay high dividends or interest. Regardless of the investment strategy or portfolio no fund can escape market risk. Understand that a higher rate of return typically involves a higher risk of loss. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Beware of dazzling performance claims. Shop around. Compare a mutual fund with others of the same type before you buy.

 
 
Name
E-Mail
Mobile Number
State
City
Article
Post Your Comment
Please Enter Code Shown     
Case Sentivity to be tested
 
   
Receiver's NAME
Receiver's EMAIL Id
Sender's NAME
Sender'S EMAIL Id
 
 
   
Name:   
Mobile No:
E-mail ID :   
State :
City :
Your Question :   
Please Enter Code Shown     
 

Comments

"This time which company is giving good term plan with maximum coverage with low premium. and also tell me the track code of the company. My age is 27 years and i want the coverage around 25lakhs"

- Deepak, 8th August 2009, Saturday

"See this..."

- Hitesh Das, 8th August 2009, Saturday

"Kindly let me have all available term plans of different copaniesin Life and General Insurance as well."

- shreeprakash Palkar, 8th August 2009, Saturday

"Good.However the term whole life insurance is not explained & it is suddenly brought at the end.It is better to be explicit against people start thinking & interpreting their own meaning."

- R.Ramaswamy, 9th August 2009, Sunday

"I am aged 28 years, and planning to take a life cover. Is it better to opt for term plan now if not then which policy you recomend for my life cover. In case of any query plz let me know"

- Gurpreet Singh, 10th August 2009, Monday

"read it"

- chinmoy muduli, 15th August 2009, Saturday

"hi"

- devendra, 17th September 2009, Thursday

"you are providing good knowledge"

- rakesh kumar, 18th September 2009, Friday

"I start with trading in market please suggest me which term i will start."

- Nagender Kumar, 23rd September 2009, Wednesday

"It is plain article.Actually no good &bads are aspects are compared in detail. "

- Manoj, 24th September 2009, Thursday

"Good Article"

- prakashjhurani, 28th September 2009, Monday

" good information Secured life with low premium ."

- bhushan, 29th September 2009, Tuesday

"I am 60years old shall I take a term insurance plan of LIC at this age"

- gopalkrishna, 29th September 2009, Tuesday

"Hi this is good knowlge can i take trem plan form every insurance co. and i get all benifit from all co. Plz tell me"

- Palak saini, 30th September 2009, Wednesday

"Single-premium term policies - Wish to know more details in this regards like minimum one term payment and the return etc"

- Anand, 30th September 2009, Wednesday

"TERM PLAN IS WELL UNDERSTOOD HERE"

- RAJIV, 29th October 2009, Thursday

"i want qtly premium of life insurance easy premium."

- balakrishnakurup, 17th November 2009, Tuesday

"I want 40 Lac SA on 24th age with minimum regular premium."

- manoj kumar, 27th November 2009, Friday

"One of my friend whose age is 28, has taken a term plan from Birla Sunlife Ins. co. ltd. of 1crore & the premium is only 19300.So i think that is the cheapest plan in Term Plan."

- kunal kishor, 18th December 2009, Friday

"how the convertible term plan works. how to convert to other plan. what is the benefits of it."

- mpdurai, 18th December 2009, Friday

"it's relay GOOD. thks for information "

- nagababukasa, 30th December 2009, Wednesday

"jhiouh"

- acs, 1st January 2010, Friday

"4-ch-65 old bapu nagar bhilwara rajasthan"

- susheelnuwal, 1st January 2010, Friday

"Please recomend some plans alongwith comparison. Do all plans require medical test and till what amount?"

- naresh, 2nd January 2010, Saturday

"good one"

- SHIV RAM SINGH, 2nd January 2010, Saturday

"Excellent article. Which is the best Insurance Company in India for a Term Plan?"

- Ashit Shroff, 3rd January 2010, Sunday

"Good Article"

- Jaikumar, 4th January 2010, Monday

"Which is best term plan now this market."

- palanivel, 4th January 2010, Monday

"which company term plan is better"

- avinash pillau, 10th January 2010, Sunday

"it is a best plan"

- DOODHNATH SINGH, 14th January 2010, Thursday

"thanks"

- Rajesh Goud, 22nd January 2010, Friday

"It is really a very good article to create the awareness about insurance policies."

- KALI SHANKAR, 3rd June 2010, Thursday
 
 
Copyright@ 2012 Suvision Holdings Pvt Ltd : Powered By EmFace