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- (L)Earning What I'm Worth
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- Money Types: Carrie, Samantha, Miranda or Charlotte?
- Salary Negotiation Post - Retraction
- How Jenny Earned $15,000 on eBay
- Personal Account: Danielli, Part I
- The Fashionomics of Retail Begging
- 6 Steps to Better Pay
- Cheap, Quick Meals
- End the Superwoman Syndrome
- Rx for a Bloated Budget
- Create Other Income Streams
- Stop Wasting Time on Things That Will Never Make You Money
- The High Cost of Part-Time Work (+ working mom poll)
- Your (New & Improved?) Credit Card
- Prep for More Pay
- On Becoming a Financial Grown-up
- Challenge: Wear Just Six Things
- Personal Account: Gabrielle's Reflection on Worth
- Smash Student Loan Debt
Diving Into Mutual Funds
By MP Dunleavey Thursday March 04, 2010
You may have heard the phrase, "A mutual fund is a like a basket of stocks." (Here, we compared a mutual fund to a box of wines.)
Now it's time to explore what that really means, as part of our new Investing 101 series.
When you buy shares of a particular mutual fund, you're pooling your money with thousands of other investors (that's the mutual part).
All that money—typically millions or billions of dollars in a single fund—is then used to buy stock in different companies, bonds, real estate or other investments.
Most mutual funds are "actively managed," which means that a team of investment experts decides what goes into the fund. Index funds are "passively managed", and simply mirror what a segment of the market does.
You probably chose certain mutual funds for your 401k account or IRA. While the amount you contribute each month may be small, say $200, you are actually buying a tiny fraction of all the investments (stocks, bonds, etc.) within those mutual funds.
How do you know what's in your mutual funds? (For those of you into the Invest-Along-With-Ashley, she's working on this, too.)
According to Morningstar, Inc., a top investment research company, there are about 8,000 different mutual funds. Each one, you might say, is a different flavor, because each contains different ingredients. Think Ben & Jerry's, but on a very large scale.
There are mutual funds that are invested primarily in stocks, bonds, overseas companies—or some combination of the above, plus a few things we haven't mentioned yet. Everything except pistachio.
To learn where your money goes in each fund, get your funds' ticker symbols (the code used to look up all investments), and plug it into the search box on Morningstar.com.
Tell us what you find! We're all about swapping investing adventures.
www.portfolio21.com
We did cover SRI back in 09. http://www.dailyworth.com/blog...r-returns-
Thanks for being so active on DW! I enjoy reading your comments.
My long-term emergency fund/house downpayment savings, on the other hand, is in a Sharebuilder account, in TWTIX (an ultra-conservative, tax-free, no-transaction fee, fixed-income securities municipal bond fund). Historically, it has a 5-year return of 4.3% (which I know is no guarantee of future results), which is higher than my HSBC savings account that currently gives me 1.1% (I keep my curve-ball fund in my HSBC account for 100% liquidity for short-term emergency needs). TWTIX allows me to take on a little more risk than a savings account or CD, while still seeking safety of principle, and saving money for the very near future. I figure an emergency can happen at any moment, and I'd like to buy a house within the next 5-7 years. With those timelines being much more near than my retirement, I decided a more conservative bond fund that I can liquidate in less than a week, if necessary, was a great choice.




