Mutual
funds have to be shopped carefully. The fundamental differences among
funds, aside from investment class and specialty, is cost. The lower the
cost of operation, the better the fundamental choice. Relative cost
makes a lot of difference in accumulated investment value over the
years.
The
average expense ratio for all mutual funds is about 1.3% per year. Many
charge more than 2% This covers only fixed costs, such as salaries,
marketing and overhead.
Then,
there are variable costs such as brokerage commissions and trading
spreads. While funds pay lower commission rates than you, the more the
fund trades, the more it spends on brokerage. And the less you earn.
(Those expenses are not included in the Expense Ratio or are they
mentioned in the prospectus, They are in the fund’s Statement of
Additional Information,)
In
2007, an analysis by researchers at Virginia Tech, the University of
Virginia, and Boston College, in a sample of 1,706 U.S. equity funds
from 1995 to 2005, found the average fund had annual trading expenses of
1.44% per year Added to the 1.32% average expense ratio for funds, the
average mutual fund expense ratio becomes a total cost of 2.76% per
year. There haven't been positive changes since. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinesNewshole
at Twitter.)
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