New Funds

Sneaky Mutual Fund Tricks

September 24, 2007

If we didn't think mutual funds were the best investment option for the vast majority of people, we wouldn't have started MAXfunds.com way back in 1999. But that doesn't mean we love everything about them. Author Ric Edelmen exposes three sneaky mutual fund industry tricks fund companies use to confuse and confound fund investors (all of which MAXfunds has written about at one time or another) in this article for the Maryland Gazette.

Confusing share classes

Retail mutual funds are now available with a dizzying array of pricing models. In many cases, a single fund might offer a half dozen share classes, and the only difference among them is the cost. If you select the wrong share class, you could pay more than necessary.

Talk about opening Pandora's box. Today, fund investors must choose among Class A, B, C, D, F, I, J, K, M, N, R, S, T, X, Y and Z shares. Depending on the share class you purchase, you might incur a load when you buy, when you sell or annually. The load might disappear after a time, or it might remain forever. In some cases, you might enjoy a lower load, but incur higher annual expenses, or vice versa. And in some instances, you might buy one share class only to have your shares automatically converted to another share class in the future!"

Incubation strategy

This is one of the retail mutual-fund industry's most devious ploys. Here's how it works: Create a whole bunch of mutual funds. Wait three years. Then evaluate the results of each fund.

The results of each fund will either be good or bad. If a fund's performance was bad, close it before anybody hears about it. But if a fund posts good results, send the data to Morningstar, which will award a five-star rating (Morningstar won't rate funds that are less than 3 years old.)"

Fund seeding

When a company issues stock, it offers a limited number of shares. A given retail mutual fund company buys as many shares as it can, and when it does, it doesn't say which of its individual funds is doing the buying.

Later, if the initial public offering (IPO) proves to be successful, the fund company disproportionately allocates the shares to its newer, smaller funds. Result: the IPO artificially boosts the return of these funds, supporting the Incubation Strategy (see above). The investors who buy seeded funds are in for a rude surprise when the fund proves to be incapable of repeating its earlier 'success.'"

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