What is a Mutual Fund?
A mutual fund is a professionally managed investment vehicle that pools money from many investors to buy a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities. Investors own shares of the fund, which represents a portion of the fund’s holdings.
How Mutual Funds Work
- Pooling: Investors contribute money to the fund
- Professional management: Fund manager selects investments
- Diversification: Fund holds many different securities
- NAV pricing: Share price calculated once daily after market close
- Distributions: Dividends and capital gains passed to shareholders
Net Asset Value (NAV)
$$\text{NAV} = \frac{\text{Total Assets} - \text{Liabilities}}{\text{Shares Outstanding}}$$
NAV is calculated at 4:00 PM ET each trading day. All buy/sell orders execute at that day’s NAV.
Types of Mutual Funds
By Asset Class
| Type | Invests In |
|---|---|
| Stock (Equity) Funds | Company stocks |
| Bond (Fixed Income) Funds | Government and corporate bonds |
| Money Market Funds | Short-term debt securities |
| Balanced Funds | Mix of stocks and bonds |
By Investment Style
| Type | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Index Funds | Track market indices passively |
| Actively Managed | Manager picks investments |
| Growth Funds | High-growth companies |
| Value Funds | Undervalued companies |
| Income Funds | Dividend and interest focus |
By Market Cap
| Type | Company Size |
|---|---|
| Large-Cap | Large companies ($10B+) |
| Mid-Cap | Medium companies ($2-10B) |
| Small-Cap | Small companies (under $2B) |
Mutual Fund Costs
Expense Ratio
Annual fee as a percentage of assets:
| Range | Classification |
|---|---|
| Under 0.20% | Very low (index funds) |
| 0.20-0.75% | Low |
| 0.75-1.25% | Average |
| Over 1.25% | High |
Sales Loads
| Type | When Charged |
|---|---|
| Front-end load | When you buy (up to 5.75%) |
| Back-end load | When you sell (declining over time) |
| No-load | No sales charge |
Other Fees
- 12b-1 fees: Marketing and distribution costs
- Redemption fees: Short-term trading penalties
- Account fees: Minimum balance charges
Mutual Funds vs. ETFs
| Feature | Mutual Fund | ETF |
|---|---|---|
| Trading | Once daily (NAV) | Throughout day |
| Minimum Investment | Often $1,000+ | 1 share |
| Expense Ratios | Generally higher | Generally lower |
| Tax Efficiency | Lower | Higher |
| Automatic Investing | Easy | May require manual |
Advantages of Mutual Funds
1. Professional Management
Experienced portfolio managers make decisions.
2. Diversification
Instant exposure to many securities.
3. Convenience
Easy automatic investment and reinvestment.
4. Regulatory Protection
SEC oversight and transparency requirements.
5. Variety
Thousands of funds for any strategy.
Disadvantages of Mutual Funds
1. Costs
Higher expense ratios than index ETFs.
2. Cash Drag
Must hold cash for redemptions.
3. Tax Inefficiency
Capital gain distributions affect all shareholders.
4. End-of-Day Pricing
Can’t trade intraday.
5. Underperformance
Most active managers underperform indices.
Key Metrics to Evaluate
| Metric | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Expense Ratio | Annual costs |
| Turnover Ratio | Trading activity (tax implications) |
| Alpha | Risk-adjusted outperformance |
| Beta | Volatility vs. market |
| Sharpe Ratio | Return per unit of risk |
Share Classes
| Class | Typical Structure |
|---|---|
| Class A | Front-end load, lower expenses |
| Class B | Back-end load, higher expenses |
| Class C | Level load, highest ongoing expenses |
| Institutional | Large minimums, lowest expenses |
How to Invest
- Define goals: Growth, income, or balanced
- Choose fund type: Active or index, asset class
- Compare costs: Always check expense ratios
- Review performance: Long-term track record
- Open account: Directly with fund company or through broker
- Invest regularly: Set up automatic contributions
Index Funds: A Special Category
Index mutual funds passively track market indices (like the S&P 500) with:
- Very low expense ratios (0.03-0.20%)
- No manager selection risk
- Tax efficiency
- Consistent market returns
Popular examples: Vanguard 500 Index (VFIAX), Fidelity 500 Index (FXAIX)
Related Financial Terms
This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.