Mutual Funds
Mutual Funds
Mutual Funds
4-1
Net Asset Value
Used as a basis for valuation of
investment company shares
– Selling new shares
– Redeeming existing shares
Calculation
Market Value of Fund Assets Fund Liabilities
NAV
Fund shares outstanding
4-2
Open-End and Closed-End Funds: Key Differences
Shares Outstanding
Closed-end: no change unless new stock is offered
Open-end: changes when new shares are sold or
old shares are redeemed
Pricing
Open-end: Fund share price = Net Asset Value
(NAV)
Closed-end: Fund share price may trade at a
premium or discount to NAV
4-3
NAV calculation
ABC Fund ($Millions except NAV)
Most Mutual Funds
Market Value Securities have little or no
Long Term Debt
4-6
4.4 Costs of Investing in
Mutual Funds
4-7
Costs of Investing in Mutual Funds
Fee Structure
–
Front-end load
–
Back-end load (contingent), (redemption fee)
Operating expenses
–
Buying and selling commissions, administrative
12 b-1expenses
charges and advisory fees for the managers
–
–
Marketing costs paid by the fundholders
–
Alternative to a load, but assessed annually
Maximum is 1% of assets
4-8
Costs of Investing in Mutual Funds
4-9
NAV and the Effective Load
Cost to initially purchase one share of a load fund = NAV +
front-end load (%) (if any).
Stated Loads typically range from ________
0 to 8.5%
If you invest $10,000 in a fund with an 8.5% front-end load, you
actually acquire shares worth $9,150; the other $850 goes to
the broker.
The load is designed to offset expenses of marketing the fund
and goes to the broker who sells the fund to the investor.
The effective load is greater than the stated load: In the above
example, the actual % commission cost (effective load) is:
4-10
Costs of Investing in Mutual Funds
4-12
Converting gross pretax returns to net
pretax returns:
This year you invested $10,000 in a mutual fund with a
6% load (one time fee) and estimated annual expenses of
1.35%. The gross return is 17.5%. What is your return
net of loads and expenses?
4-15
Problem 1
Offer price =
4-16
Problem 2
4-17
Problem 3
4-18
Problem 4
MVA = $42M
Value of stocks sold = (600,000x$25)= $15,000,000 or
Value of stocks purchased = (200kx$50)+(200kx$25) = $15,000,000
Market Value Assets = $42,000,000
$15,000,000 = 0.357 or 35.7%
$42,000,000
AHP = 0.5 x 1/Turnover
Average holding period?
= 0.5 x 1/0.357 = 1.4 yrs
4-19
Problem 5
4-20
Problem 6
a. Sell after 4 years: Suppose you have $1000 to invest. The initial
investment in Class A shares is ____ net of the front-end load. After 4
$940
years, your portfolio will be worth:
$940 (1.10)4 = $1,376.25
Class B shares allow you to invest the full $1,000, but your investment
performance net of 12b-1 fees will be only 9.5%, and you will pay a 1%
back-end load fee if you sell after 4 years.
Your redemption value after 4 years will be:
$1,000 (1.095)4 x 0.99 = $1,423.28
4-22
Problem 7 Cont.
$3,926.61
[$1,000 / $940 ] = (1.10)N / (1.095)N
For the Class B shares, there is 1.06383
no back-end load/ in
= [1.10 this case
1.095] N since the
horizon is greater than 5 years. Therefore, the value of the Class NB
shares will be: LN 1.06383 = LN [1.10 / 1.095]
LN 1.06383 = N x LN [1.10 / 1.095]
$1,000 (1.095)15 =
$3,901.32 0.061875 = N x 0.004556
N = 13.581 years
At this longer horizon, Class A shares are the better choice. Why?
4-23
Problem 8
4-24
Problem 9
Remember also that the high turnover rate can have tax
consequences that further reduces your after-tax return.
4-25