How to Buy a Mutual Fund
CC photo by: pinkbelt
In this post, we’ll discuss some best practices when it comes to purchasing index funds and mutual funds, in general. Mutual funds are a great option for those who don’t have the time or savvy to purchase stocks or other types of investments. First, let’s cover some basics on mutual funds.
What is a Mutual Fund?
A mutual fund is an investment vehicle that pools money from investors and then invests that money into a combination of investment vehicles, usually in the form of stocks, bonds, and money market accounts. Mutual funds are popular investments because they allow you to diversify your money into multiple investments in order to limit your risk exposure. Also, they are managed by professional investors, and if you have a good one you can sleep easy at night.
What is the Difference Between an Index Fund and a Mutual Fund?
Index funds are a type of mutual fund that attempts to mimic the performance of a stock market index. Like a mutual fund, index fund share values are based on the net asset value of all of the stocks they have invested in. Rather than its holdings being regularly bought and sold through managed trades, index funds periodically change investments based on a set of rules or infrequent committee selected changes.
Where Can I Buy Mutual Funds?
In a previous post, we discussed how to make a stock trade. If you don’t know the ‘where’ of how to make a mutual fund purchase, check out that post. You can purchase mutual funds at all of the same discount brokers. Additionally you can call the individual fund companies to invest directly through them if you have a fund in mind. This is usually a great way to avoid broker transaction fees.
How Can I Buy Mutual Funds?
If you’ve purchased mutual funds through an employee sponsored retirement plan, such as a 401K, the process of purchasing a fund on your own is slightly different.
- Step 1: Choose a discount brokerage
- Step 2: Submit funds to your discount brokerage account
- Step 3: Select the mutual fund that you’d like to buy. Pay attention to which mutual funds your discount broker is offering transaction fee free.
- Step 4: Choose the right funds. Look for characteristics like low expense ratios (under 1.2%), no load fees, managers with good track records who have been at the fund for a while, and funds that meet or beat their category averages. You may be limited by the amount you have to initially spend to purchase the fund. These amounts vary by type of account. If you have an IRA you will usually have to pay less to start than a non tax-sheltered account. If you’d like to know more about how to choose the right mutual funds, check out this guest post on how to eliminate mutual fund deadbeats from your portfolio (written for genxfinance.com).
- Step 5: Purchase the fund. You enter in a total dollar amount that you’d like to apply towards the fund, vs. a price that you’d like to pay as you do when you purchase a stock. The price you will end up paying per share will be the closing price on the day that you purchase the fund. The amount you submit to purchase is divided by that share price to determine how many shares of the fund you will be vested in. You will also need to decide whether you would like your dividends, capital gains, or both reinvested into additional shares. If you’re young and have many years of investing ahead of you, there’s little reason to not choose ‘both’.
- Step 6: Adding to your Holdings: Once you’ve completed your up front minimum contribution you are free to add more funds at a lower contribution level (typically $50 or so, but some have no minimums).
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This post was very informative. Thanks.
Excuse my ignorance, but I was wondering (and probably that’s why I’m on this page)… are mutual funds safe? Because it seems that it’s a collective thing, and if it’s a collective thing–what if your other co-investors pull out? If and when that happens, what will happen to the mutual fund you’ve invested on?
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