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This chapter provides important information about closed-end and open-end investment companies, including net asset value (NAV) and taxation. Learn about the advantages offered by funds, sources of return to investors, and different types and styles of investment portfolios.
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Chapter 11 Investment Companies
Investment Companies • Closed-end • Open-end (commonly called a mutual fund)
Important General Information • Net asset value (NAV) - the value of a share • Taxation - pass through vehicles
Advantages Offered by Funds • Diversification • Professional management • Custodial and other services
Closed-end Investment Companies • Fixed capital structure • Shares are bought and sold in the secondary markets • Shares may sell for a premium or discount from NAV • Tendency for shares to sell at a discount from NAV
Discount From Net Asset Value Adams Express $10.75 $12.12 12.8%
Sources of Return to the Investor • Income distributions (dividends) • Capital gains distributions • Appreciation in the NAV • Change in the discount/premium
Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) • Specialized closed-end investment company • Portfolio of properties and/or mortgages
Unit Trust • Fixed portfolio • Passive investment
Open-end Investment Companies - Mutual Funds • Have a variable capital structure • Shares are bought and sold (redeemed) from the mutual fund • Shares cannot sell for a discount from NAV
The Load Fee • Charged to investor when the shares are purchased • Compensates the sales person • is analogous to brokerage commissions for buying securities
The Load Fee • May vary with dollar amount invested • Load expenses cause investors to pay a premium over the fund's NAV
No-load Mutual Fund • Mutual fund without a sales charge • Other fees and expenses apply
Other Fees and Expenses • Early withdrawal fees (exit fees or reverse load) • Management fees • Operating expenses • 12b-1 fees
Mutual Fund Portfolios • May be classified by • type of investment • investment style
Types of Investments • Growth funds • Balanced funds • Income funds • Growth and income funds • Specialized funds
Specialized Funds • Sector funds • Bond funds • Global funds • International funds • Single country or regional funds • Index Funds
Investment Styles • Large cap • Mid-size cap • Small cap • Growth • Value
Capitalization • Total market value of a company’s stock • Price of the stock times number of shares outstanding
Growth • A strategy designed to identify companies that offer exceptional opportunity for capital appreciation
Value • A strategy designed to identify companies whose stock price appears to be below some estimate of the firm's intrinsic value
Returns Earned by Funds • Advantages do not necessarily include superior returns • Tendency to underperform the market
Selected Aggregate FundReturns 1997 - 2001 Annual Return Growth 8.9% Large-cap 9.4 Small-cap 9.9 Balanced 8.0 International 2.8 S&P 500 10.7
Factors that Affect Investors’ Returns • Expenses • Fees • load fees and exit fees • 12b-1 fees • Movements in the market
Impact of Taxation on Investors • Fund report returns before tax • Shareholders pay applicable taxes • Shareholders realize after-tax returns
Selecting Funds • Low fees and portfolio turnover • Timing of distributions • Tax efficiency
Index Funds and Exchange - Traded Funds (ETFs) • Use of index (e.g. S&P 500) • Diversification - only market risk • Low fees • Low taxes • Cannot outperform the market • Return should mirror the market return