How to Evaluate Mutual Funds and Choose which Funds to Buy

OK, I’ll admit my past investments in mutual funds are good examples of how NOT to evaluate and choose which funds to buy. However, by investing unwisely I have learned a few lessons that I will share with readers. I also encourage you to share your own mutual fund buying experiences, good or painful, with a comment. There’s always more to learn! This article describes some methods to help evaluate a mutual funds’ risk and performance before choosing which fund you want to buy.

Remember, while reading, that mutual funds are not only for investing in the stock market. They are great tools for investing in bonds, bullion and other types of assets. For more details, please skim The Types of Mutual Funds, Why They’re Good, and Quick Buying Tips.

Evaluating Mutual Funds

Take a Quick Look by Starting with the Fund Facts Sheets

Fund Facts are Your “Friend”

I’m never sure I trust employees of the government or of a financial institution when they say they want to be my friend. I mean it’s nice but I’m always a bit suspicious. I feel the same way about the required Fund Facts sheets provided by mutual fund issuers. It does provide a lot of useful information in a consistent format and in fairly readable English. However, I wouldn’t rely solely on the Fund Facts sheet when deciding whether to invest in a fund.

What Does the Fund Facts Sheet Identify?

Performance History
How did the fund fare in 2002 and 2008? The stock market as a whole did poorly those years. The TSX Composite fell about 35%. The S&P 500 in the US dropped about 32%. Bond and precious metals funds should have shown reasonably good results those years as investors fled from stocks into perceived security. Did the fund do better or worse than the market average?

Investments
The Fund Facts sheet should list the top investments of the fund and describe the types of investments held by the fund.

This can be a very important section to review!

For example, you might think a fund called the BMO Canadian Equity Class Series A Fund would be invested in Canadian Equities, right? Yet in the description of “What does the fund invest in?” BMO states “The fund may invest up to 30% of the purchase cost of the fund’s assets in foreign securities.” In other words, the fund could go and buy stocks in, say, businesses in Greece and Spain if it wanted to. Canadian, eh?

Costs
The costs section includes the cost to buy the fund including any commissions or fees. It also includes the ongoing costs of owning the fund including the MER and whether the MER pays trailer fees. (Trailer fees are often annual and are paid to the person who sold you the fund for as long as you hold the fund.) If there is a fee to sell the fund (called a deferred service charge or a declining sales charge) it should be reported here, too.

Risk
The sheet gives an approximation on a scale of 1 to 5 for how risky an investment in the fund is.

The problem is there is quite a difference between what the industry considers risky (hedging; options; leveraged investing; penny stocks) and what most investors like me consider risky (losing 20% of the funds value if the market sways). I think you shouldn’t put too much faith in this chart as I think most stock funds are going to be listed as “medium” risk.

Ellen Roseman of the Toronto Star wrote a great article on this called “Is a fund that drops 60% only ‘medium’ risk?

Get Under the Hood: Look at the Core Holdings

The names of mutual funds often seem to have been selected by a random phrase generator pre-loaded with words like “performance; high; income; dividend; yield; growth; security; guaranteed“ The names often don’t actually reflect what is held by the fund. The only way to know what you’re really buying a share of is to look at the holdings of the mutual fund.

For Canadian funds, the top holdings are usually easy to find in the Fund Facts summary for the product.

Be Careful because Fund Names Don’t Match Fund Holdings
For example, the RBC Global Dividend Growth Fund Series A is actually invested 63% in American equities. [UPDATE: In February 2014 it was down to 35.6%.]  If you bought this fund assuming it was investing primarily outside of North America you’d be wrong. Look at the details, not at the name.

In another example, the RBC Asian Equity Fund Series A is 15% invested in Australia. [Update: In February 2014, still 14.1% in Australia.] Now I don’t know for sure what they teach now, but when I went to school Australia was NOT part of Asia. Names can be misleading.

How Will You Make Money from the Mutual Fund?

One thing I didn’t consider well enough before buying a mutual fund was how I would make money from owning that fund. I was used to funds that paid distributions that were re-invested as additional units. I honestly didn’t look closely at that aspect of this fund before I bought it.

The fund, like many of my investments, promptly tanked as the price of oil halved. I sighed. The oil patch and I have a long history and I knew that given enough time and patience, petroleum stocks rebound. I’d just have to wait since I still considered the companies the fund was invested in were good choices for the long term.

Imagine my shock when I realized, though, that this particular fund is purely a capital gains play. It doesn’t make any distributions, ever. You buy it, wait till it appreciates in value, then sell it. The only money you make is the difference between your buy and sell prices.

I *hate* having money invested that shows no annual return. If a stock pays at least a small dividend, I feel better if I have to wait for a market rebound. With this fund I had to either sell and eat the capital loss or hold and lose the opportunity value of that money while I waited for a rebound (and hopefully an eventual uptick.)

I learned my lesson that time. I don’t buy anything now that doesn’t have some form of annual distribution. I’m just not wired to handle dead weight investing.

Look at the Fees and Commissions Including the MER

Almost all mutual funds have a Management Expense Ratio or MER. The MER tells you what percentage of the fund is used to pay costs each year. A typical MER might be anywhere from 0.35 to 2.5%. That’s quite a difference. It means you are paying $17.5 to $125 per year in fees to own $5000 of a fund.

In a good year, the MER is subtracted from the earnings of the fund before the profits are distributed to the fund owners. Profits may be distributed as income or as an increased value per unit of the fund or as an increased number of units in the fund.

In a bad year, however, the fund may lose money. then the MER is subtracted from the actual value of the fund. That’s right; you have to pay the MER even if the fund loses money.

If the markets go down and a fund loses 15% in value and the fund has a 2.5% MER, then the real loss passed on to the fund’s holders is 17.5%!

According to various studies, Canada has some of the highest MERs for mutual funds in the world. Check closely how much you would be paying before purchasing a fund.

Some companies offer funds with comparatively very low MERs. These include the TD e-series funds available only to investors with an online TD Canada Trust EasyWeb account or a TD Waterhouse Discount Brokerage account. (Vanguard is now offering some very low MER ETFs in Canada, too.)

Look at the Redemption Terms

For many mutual funds you are locked in to your purchase for 90 days. If you try to redeem (sell) your fund holdings before 90 days you may have to pay a very large fee. Check the prospectus for information on early redemption.

However, funds may have longer or shorter holding requirements. For example, at the time this was written, there was no minimum holding period required for the Renaissance High Interest Savings Account mutual fund, ATL5000. This fund is encouraging investors to “deposit” cash like in a daily interest savings account while waiting to invest elsewhere.

Look at the “Loads” Front End, Back End, Deferred Sales Charges or Declining Sales Charges

Some mutual funds still charge you a fee to buy them (a front load) or to sell them (a back end load or DSC.) It really should not be necessary to pay a fee just to buy or sell a mutual fund. Check whether there are any loads or DSCs and don’t buy if there are.

Look at the Trailer Fees for Mutual Funds

This fee is trickier to assess. A trailer fee is paid to the person who sold a mutual fund to a customer. The trailer is often paid annually for as long as that customer holds the fund.
This is not great, but it wouldn’t be so bad if the trailer fee was identical for every mutual fund. It’s not. Some funds pay larger trailer fees.

Now if you are the person who sells mutual funds and you could sell either of two funds and one will pay you 1% of the sale price per year forever, and the other will pay you 0.25% of the sale price for three years, which one will you naturally feel inclined to sell?

The problem is that as the customer we want to buy a fund with low or no trailer fees. So it’s up to us to check various fund choices and be aware that the salesperson might have a bias towards a fund with a higher trailer fee.

Ask yourself: who am I trying to make money for, myself or my salesperson?

Did you know that you pay trailer fees to your brokerage even if you have a self-directed brokerage account? That’s right, even though YOU are the person analyzing and recommending to yourself which mutual funds you should buy, you are paying your brokerage a trailer fee.  There have been a few attempts to change this but at most brokerages the practice stands.

Comparing Apples and Cows

Two funds may sound the same and have nothing in common. This is where it’s important, yet again, to look at what the fund is actually investing in.

For example, in early 2013, the BMO Monthly Income Fund is invested (at this time) 1% in cash and 51% in Canadian equities. The Fidelity Monthly Income Fund is invested 10% in cash, 24% in Canadian equities and 16% in foreign equities. Despite the very similar names they are not invested in comparable ways. Differences in their earnings could be due to differences in the risks they take and in the types of assets they hold.

Get Independent Advice Before Buying Mutual Funds

If you’re going to invest in mutual funds you should be looking for impartial, third party advice on which funds to buy. If you go to a bank, they are almost sure to only try to sell you their own line of mutual funds.

Where can you find impartial advice? For  years, Gordon Pape used to write an annual book comparing funds. He only made money from you buying the book whether or not you ever bought any funds. Now, his business runs an online newsletter called the Mutual Funds Update. (http://www.gordonpape.com/ )There are probably other newsletters out there too. Again, the newsletter publishers do not get a trailer fee because you don’t buy anything from them.

Other sources include reading financial newspapers and magazines.

You can also hire a fee-only financial planner. They get paid by the hour or project and do not receive any commission for what you purchase, because they do not actually sell it to you. It may be hard to find a fee-only planner, though, that is interested in helping clients with a low value portfolio.

When are Mutual Funds Worth Buying and Which Ones Should You Pick

Bond Funds

Buying units in a bond fund requires less capital investment for more diversification with lower purchase commissions than buying individual bonds yourself. It also provides active management. What’s not to like?

Compare the fees for ETFs vs mutual fund bond funds. Also compare the performance, though.

I’d take a close look at the PH&N bond funds, including their total return bond fund. There may be equally good bond funds out there elsewhere, too. I’m not an expert.

Disclosure:  I do own some holdings in a PH&N bond fund but it is not one available through discount brokerages only through company pension plans. And yes, in 2013 it lost money.

High Interest Savings Account Funds

The daily interest savings account mutual funds provide a convenient place to park cash in some discount brokerage accounts. For example, at CIBC Investor’s Edge you can put cash into ATL5000 with a minimum $1000 deposit. At other brokerages it isn’t as easy. For example at BMO InvestorLine there is a minimum deposit of $25,000! [UPDATE: As of April 11, 2013, BMO InvestorLine is offering a BMO HISA with a minimum deposit of $5,000.]

I have used ATL5000 at Investor’s Edge, RBF2010 at RBC Direct Investing and AAT770 DYN500 at InvestorLine successfully.

Precious Metals Funds

It’s difficult to buy and hold precious metals safely. If you want precious metals in your portfolio, it’s worth considering buying them through a mutual fund or ETF. Some funds like the BMG Bullion fund (BMG 100) hold real physical metals for you in secure storage.

Personally, I don’t own any precious metals and I have no idea in which fund it would be best to invest.

Index Funds

If I was investing in equities, I personally would choose a fund that matches a large comprehensive index, such as the TSX Composite for Canadian equities, the S&P500 for US Equities and something equally broad for other international equities. Any analysis of which fund to pick needs to look closely at the fees (especially the MER) and at the actual holdings to make sure it is replicating the index. You must compare the ETFs and the mutual funds to ensure you are getting the best options.

Remember, at many brokerages you will pay each time you purchase or sell an ETF, but you will not pay a commission to purchase or sell a mutual fund. You generally can also reinvest mutual fund distributions in fractional units, but you usually cannot hold fractional units of an ETF. Ideally you’d like to find a mutual fund that holds the same index as an ETF for the same or lesser MER. Then you could have the lowest fees and the best re-investment policy.

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Did you buy units in a fund that made you wealthy in weeks? Or did you “turn $1,000,000 into $10,000 in one easy step” (my personal specialty)? Please share your experiences with mutual funds with a comment.

The Types of Mutual Funds, Why They’re Good, and Quick Buying Tips

Most people think a mutual fund is just a tool to buy shares in the stock market in a lot of different companies. But mutual funds offer much more than just equity group buys. Mutual funds also invest in ways you may never have considered. For some types of investing, mutual funds are very useful indeed. But which funds are worth a very close look?

What Exactly is a Mutual Fund?

A mutual fund takes a pool of money and (usually) invests it in more than one business or financial holding or instrument. Investors can buy units in the mutual fund. Owning a unit gives the investor a fractional share of all of the investments that the mutual fund has purchased.

What Types of Mutual Funds are Offered for Sale?

Balanced Funds Bond funds Dividend Income Funds
Global Funds Gold and Silver Mutual Funds High Interest Savings Account funds
Income Funds Index Funds Money market funds
Preferred Shares Funds Stock funds T-Bill Funds
Wrap Funds

What Do These Mutual Funds Invest In and What Assets Do They Hold?

Bond Funds

In this type of fund, the fund manager invests in a selection of bonds. The bonds may be all government-issued bonds, corporate bonds, municipal bonds or a mixture. Bonds usually have a term at the end of which they mature or come due for payment. So bond funds can select bonds that are almost mature or that have terms of 1-50 years before they will reach maturity.

Bonds are bought and sold just like common shares. If you have a discount brokerage account, you can sign on and look for a bond for sale and buy it. The price, however, includes the commission charged by the seller. That makes it difficult to know if you are paying a good price for your bond. A bond fund can help you avoid this problem.

A bond fund buys many, many bonds and can negotiate for a lower commission on purchase. Bonds are often expensive, too, so by buying units in a bond fund you can buy a larger variety of bonds than if you were purchasing them individually. Bond funds will usually also have access to more bonds to purchase than an individual investor will. Your brokerage is unlikely to offer all of the bonds currently for sale. A bond fund, however, likely has access to almost all bonds currently on offer. (Can you tell I like bond funds better than buying individual bonds?)

PH&N is well known for its bond funds. The PH&N Total Return Bond Fund  invests in corporate and government bonds from Canadian, American and other foreign issuers. The average term to maturity for the bonds held in the fund is 7-12 years. It can hold up to 25% of the fund in cash. It has clearly defined rules for how much risk it will take when selecting bonds. (Bonds are rated with A and B ratings by independent rating companies.) This is an actively managed fund. Right now, all bonds are at risk if interest rates begin to climb significantly and quickly. (I wish!) If you look at the Current Holdings for this fund, you will actually be able to see them trying to mitigate this risk through careful selection of terms and yields.

Money Market Funds

These funds are often considered a “parking lot” for money waiting on an investment decision. They don’t offer much income but they are not at high risk of losing money. (They do lose money sometimes though.)

Money market funds invest in short term holdings. These can include federal and provincial government debt securities, bank issued deposit notes and other commercial paper.

The CIBC Money Market Fund https://www.cibc.com/ca/mutual-funds/no-load-savings/money-market-fund.html has typically earned less than a 1% annual return for the last 5 years.

High Interest Savings Account Funds

These funds mimic a high interest savings account. For example, you usually buy the fund in $1 or $10 increments. If you buy $1000 of a $1 fund, you get 1000 units. Interest payments are made monthly on the daily balance of the fund.

These funds were created for two reasons:

1. People did not like losing money in a money market fund and wanted a perfectly safe, interest-paying place to park cash.  HISAs are often CDIC insured just like bank accounts.

2. Financial institutions offering high interest savings accounts discovered this is another way to capture cash deposits.

There is another benefit for the issuer: If a person sells their entire holding before the monthly dividend, the issuer gets to keep the interest. This is the same as if you close a bank account before your interest is paid in. The difference is that many customers forfeit the interest on these funds because they want to re-invest elsewhere in a hurry. [UPDATE 2014: I’ve since discovered that in practice many institutions pay the interest earned to date if you sell all of your holdings mid-month. This is much better than I expected and I applaud them for it.]

Be aware that the “monthly” payment is not necessarily made on the last day or first day of the month. For example, DYN 500 has made payments to me on the 25 and when the 25 was a stat, on the 28 of the month. ATL5000 paid on the 4 th.

CIBC Investor’s Edge customers can buy units in ATL5000 the Renaissance high interest savings account fund. (For details, please see ATL5000 High Interest Savings Account Fund at CIBC Investor’s Edge Online Discount Brokerage.) BMO InvestorLine customers can buy units of AAT770. RBC Direct Investing customers can buy units of RBF2010.

T-Bill Funds

As the name suggests these funds usually invest in federal government issued Treasury Bills. Now, while interest rates are incredibly low, T-Bill funds are out of favour. However, in the past they have been an extremely safe place to park cash for a short term with a small return on investment. T-Bill funds can lose money.

The RBC Canadian T-Bill Fund http://fundinfo.rbcgam.com/mutual-funds/rbc-funds/fund-pages/rbf262.fs returned an annual average return of less than 1% for the past 5 years.

Preferred Shares Funds

Some companies offer two types of shares for sale: common shares and preferred shares. There are bond funds that invest only in preferred shares. The fund manager may pick preferred shares depending on the dividends, the term to maturity (if applicable), the price versus the call back price and other factors. They may select preferred shares only in certain industries, such as banks or insurance companies, or they may select preferred shares from a wide variety of business types.

The Manulife Preferred Income Fund http://pricesandperformance.manulifemutualfunds.ca/manulife/profiles/en/72129/fund/html/ is invested 95 96% in Canada and holds preferred shares in companies such as Talisman Energy, Bell Aliant, Enbridge Cooperators, Power Financial and the Bank of Nova Scotia. It targets an annual return of 5% to investors. (Note: the return is not guaranteed, and the value of the units in the fund can rise or fall.)

Gold and Silver Mutual Funds

These funds can invest in either metal gold and silver or in companies that mine, produce and distribute gold and silver. It may be very difficult for you to own gold or silver metal. You may find a precious metals fund gives you the benefits you want without the risks and storage costs of personally owning metal.

The BMG Bullion Fund http://www.bmgbullion.com/reg_1/fid_1cad/tab_1/BMG_Fund_-_Class_A  says it provides investors with a convenient way to hold gold, silver and platinum in bullion form. It purchases the actual metals and holds them. The bullion is then held in insured storage. As you might expect, the fee for holding this fund is fairly high due to the actual storage costs among other fees.

It’s important to know there are no dividends paid by funds investing directly in physical metals. If you are looking for dividends, you will need to look for a precious metals fund that invests in companies that mine, produce or trade in precious metals.

Stock Funds

The most widely known type of mutual fund holds shares in dozens, hundreds or thousands of companies. The holdings are managed by a fund manager. This manager decides when to buy more shares in a specific company, when to sell holdings in another company and how much money to keep in cash reserves in the fund. This type of manager is actively controlling the fund’s investments.

An example might be the Dynamic Power American Growth Fund http://funds.dynamic.ca/fundprofile.aspx?f=PW2K&lang=EN . [UPDATE: All of the following facts date from January 2013. The fund has changed again since then.] It is invested 89% in common shares of US stocks, 3% in foreign stocks, 4% in Canadian stocks and 4% in cash. The stocks it holds are 47% information technology stocks, 34% consumer discretionary stocks and 15% health care stocks. (The missing 4% is the cash.) Examples of its holdings include Google, Whole Foods Market, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Amazon.com. A single unit of this fund costs $8.41. A single share of Amazon.com costs $265.56. By buying units of this fund you can invest in many companies even if you don’t have hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Index Funds

Another type of fund buys the same assets in the same proportion as listed on a specific index. For instance the S&P/TSX 60 Composite (http://www.standardandpoors.com/indices/sp-tsx-60/en/us/?indexId=spcadntx–caduf–p-ca-l– ) is a list of 60 large capitalization companies traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange. An index fund that stated it was directly matching the TSX Composite 60 should hold shares in each of those 60 companies.

Be aware that in recent years a large number of new “indexes” have been created. Some of these are no different than if you sat down and wrote a list of company names. For example I could make the Crooks’ Household Index and say it included Metro, Canadian Tire and Shoppers Drug Mart. But, you exclaim, what about the dozens of other stocks that would fall into that type of category? Why aren’t they listed? Simply because I didn’t pick them!

If you buy an index fund, check which index it represents. Then go and research what is included in that index and why. Make sure the index makes sense.

The CIBC Canadian Index Fund https://www.cibc.com/ca/mutual-funds/no-load-growth/can-index-fund.html for example, says it “is managed to obtain a return that approximates the performance of the S&P/TSX Composite Index. If you read that closely, you will realize it is not a true index fund. A true index fund is not actively managed; it just holds the same stocks as the index it represents.

Balanced Funds

These funds invest in a blend of financial choices. They may have money invested in short term commercial paper (money markets), bonds, preferred shares, common shares, gold, precious metals and other options.

The purpose of a balanced fund is usually to provide the customer with a single purchase that provides exposure to a variety of investments. Often the balanced fund seeks to ensure a steady profitable return by actively managing where the money is invested. Bonds, for example, help protect a fund from a drop in the value of common shares.

Shares, in turn, help protect a fund from a drop in bond values if interest rates rise. These balanced funds are often suitable for long-term investing in RRSPs and TFSAs.

The Fidelity Canadian Balanced Fund http://www.fidelity.ca/cs/Satellite/en/public/products/mutual_funds/asset_allocation/cdn_asset_allocation/bl  is an example. It holds shares in 71 81 equities and 967 927 bonds. About 41 43 % of the fund is in Canadian equities, 34 37 % in Canadian bonds, 11 7 % in Foreign equities, 11 10 % in Foreign bonds and 3% in cash.

Wrap Funds

Be a bit cautious about the differences between a balanced fund and a wrap fund. A typical wrap fund is a fund that buys units in other mutual funds. So while a balanced fund might buy 3 issues of bonds, and 7 common stocks, a wrap fund might buy units in a bond fund and units in an equity fund.

The problem is that a wrap fund may charge another MER (fee) on top of the fees already charged by the funds it is buying into. In the above example, the wrap fund might have a MER of 1% and the bond fund it owns might have a MER of 1.25% and the equity fund it owns might have a MER of 3.5%. That’s a lot of fees.

The balanced fund will typically have only one fee as it is investing directly in the bonds and stocks it holds.

If you are not sure if the product you are being offered is a wrap fund, ask! Ask for a clear written explanation of the fees and MERs before you agree to purchase anything.

In general, wrap funds are less profitable for the investor (you) than for the seller (the bank or finance company.) Be wary.

That said, some balanced funds are also actually investing in funds not directly in assets. They may or may not have high fees and MERs. You have to check the details carefully.

Income Funds

Income funds can be any of these other types of funds. There is no “one” type of investment in an income fund. You could have a fund that holds 100% common shares; 100% preferred shares; or 100% bonds and it could be named an income fund.

Don’t try to compare income funds without closely examining what’s held inside them. You can’t compare the past annual return of an “income” fund that holds 75% stocks with an “income” fund that holds 95% bonds. The returns will be significantly different because the asset classes and the risks are significantly different.

Global Funds

Similarly, Global Funds can hold equities, bonds or even just foreign cash. The name is meaningless. You will have to look at the holdings to decide what type of fund it really is. Even the name “global” can sometimes be misleading. Some “global” funds hold 25-50% Canadian equities!

Dividend Income Funds

Again, these are funds that could hold a variety of assets. The name implies they are invested in equities that pay good dividends. Check though! Some funds have misleading names.

Why Buy Mutual Funds? Quick Tips to Consider and 4 Types Worth Buying

Mutual funds can help with specialized investing goals. It’s worth considering buying the following types of funds:

Bond funds

(Also consider Bond ETFs)
Bond funds have access to more bonds than individual investors. Bond funds pay lower purchase commissions, too. Buying a bond fund gives you greater bond diversity than buying a single issue or two. An actively managed bond fund can also reduce risk due to rising interest rates. Look closely at the PH&N bond funds.

HISA funds

Most brokerage accounts are not paying any interest on cash holdings. If you can, you may want to park your cash in a high interest savings account fund while you wait to re-invest. InvestorLine, unfortunately, requires a minimum holding of $25,000. [UPDATE: As of April 11, 2013 the minimum for the BMO HISA AAT770 is $5,000.] Investor’s Edge has a minimum of only $1,000. Check out DYN500 and ATL5000 among other funds. Look for early redemption fees and minimum holdings as these can change periodically.

Precious Metals funds

(Also consider Precious Metals ETFs)
Gold bugs may want to invest in a fund that stores physical bullion safely. The BMG Bullion fund might be worth a look.

Preferred Shares funds

(Also consider Preferred Shares ETFs)
Investors looking for reliable income without much if any chance of a capital gain but with a pretty high degree of safety for an equity investment may wish to hold a preferred share fund. Look for income funds that invest in preferred shares such as the Manulife Preferred Income Fund.

Major Index funds

For investors who cannot, for one reason or another, buy ETFs an index fund with a low MER (fee) that mirrors a major stock index such as the S&P/TSX Composite or the American S&P 500 might be worth considering. Check whether the fund actually buys the index. A true index fund is not actively managed and moves up and down daily with the market it mirrors.

Whole websites have been written on the benefits of Couch Potato investing. You may want to read through one.

Disclaimer

I’m not a financial advisor and have no training in providing investment advice. In fact, I’ve been known to make some spectacularly bad investing decisions. Please use your own native wit and seek professional advice where appropriate.

Related Reading

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Are there other types of mutual funds I’ve missed? If you have invested in a different type of mutual fund to serve some investing goal, please share your experiences with a comment.