alexspick.com alexspick.com
Site Home About Us Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions Add Your Link Add Article
Search:   
Get Multiple Links
 

Business & Commerce

Computers & Networking

Fashion & Lifestyle

Family & Home

Jobs & Careers

Estate & Realty

Eating & Drinking

People & Society

Self Enhancement

Science & Research

Politics & Government

Online & Board Games

Issues & News

Outdoor & Sports

Culture & Art

Shopping Online

Hygiene & Health

Recreation

Finance & Investment

Medical Care

Travel & Accommodation

Academics & Learning

Children & Teens

Automobiles

 

Site Home » Finance & Investment » Investment Advice
 

Reasons To Fire Your Mutual Fund Company: 12b-1 Fees

 
Author: Mark Brandon

The 12b-1 fee is the obscurely-named outrage that dings investors in mutual funds so that management can market the fund. In 1980, the mutual fund industry successfully lobbied the SEC to allow this fee with the justification that a larger fund lowers the expenses for everybody. In theory, the logic is right when you take into account the same expenses being spread over a larger pool of assets. However, there are several problems with this thinking:

1) A larger fund does not necessarily become easier to manage. Over the last 25 years, multi-billion dollar mutual funds have become the norm. When I worked for Fidelity in the early 1990's, the largest fund in the world at the time, the famous Fidelity Magellan, was around $25 billion. Even then, concerns had set in that it had become too large to outperform the market. Since then, Magellan's size has been a deterrent. Like a large barge, meaningful changes in its trajectory take too long to implement. Of the funds with in excess of $5 billion, most of them track the S&P 500 minus their outsize fees because that is all they can do. Yet, even these large funds continue to charge the 12b-1 fee.

2) Certainly, if a fund is closed to new investors (which makes the fund easier to manage), the existing shareholders should be relieved of the 12b-1 fee. But, as of November 2003, when the House introduced HR 2420, 139 closed funds still levied the fee. The funds are charging a marketing expense for funds that no longer accept new investors. Huh? Like crack cocaine, fund management firms just became addicted to the stream of poorly disclosed fund fees.

3) A fund is able to call itself "no load" as long as the 12b-1 fee is 25 basis points (.25%) or lower, although many funds charge the max-allowable 100 basis points.

In practice, the 12b-1 fee is partially shared with advisers who tout the funds, and the rest is gravy to the fund firm. They do not disclose this fee as part of their management fee, and even obscure the fee in their overall expense ratio.

Two thirds of mutual funds charge this fee, and I would bet that few investors know about it. HR 2420, introduced by congressman Mike Castle of Delaware, sought to ban this fee for closed funds only, and even that was stalled in the Senate, despite broad bi-partisan support and backing from the white house.

Author Bio:
Mark Brandon is a eminent columnist. Mark likes to write articles about this subject.
You can search for this article using: real estate investment, real estate finance and investment, best money investment
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
What Is The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
 
Discover the Best Home Mortgage Rates
 
Is The Bear In The Cage?
 
Why Does Health Insurance Cost So Much?
 
What To Do If You Can't Pay Back Your Loan
 
Credit Report Scoring Errors - How to Write a Dispute Letter
 
Quick Tips About Mortgage Application Fees
 
5 Tips On How To Save Money At The Gas Pump
 
Using Charts: Another Tool to Identify the Best Investments
 
Personal Loan For Consolidating Debt - Using An Unsecured Personal Loan To Improve Your Finances
 
 
 
Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> Terms & Conditions
© 2006-2008 www.alexspick.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.