Understand
what load fees are, and if any are associated with the fund you are being peddled.
Not exact matches
You also pay those mutual funds, by the way — sometimes there's
what called a sales
load when you buy it; and an expense ratio, a recurring
fee the fund deducts from your account.
@arsenal207
what does that have to do with anything wether or not fans go to the Emirates, I do but not often, but most of Arsenal supporters around the world don't have the privileged that we have in UK, I have read here in the past Arsenal supporters walking or traveling tens of miles to their nearest cafe to watch arsenal match on TV they walked in the midday sun in places like Central Africa, so are you suggesting they are not true supporters and have no right to comment??? And
what of those supporters who pay shi!t
loads of cable
fees to watch their team, I say they are.
They can only spend
what they generate in revenue but can comfortably cover the outlay on Pogba's transfer
fee and wages by off -
loading several players this summer.
To put that in other words,
what they show is how well each fund did compared to the rest in their class, on the basis of their total returns after discounting sales charges,
loads and redemption
fees, and including a «penalty» if the fund experienced larger price fluctuations, in average, than its alternatives (or a plus if it suffered smaller ones).
What I think would be more interesting (not to mention useful) is to compare the 10, or 5,
loaded balanced mutual funds which had the best 10 - year track record in 1996 - And then compare it «forward» with a no -
load, low -
fee balanced fund like Wellington.
Investors might also pay markups, due when a brokerage sells securities from its inventory at a price higher than the market rate; sales
loads, sometimes assessed when you make or sell an investment; surrender charges, imposed when someone pulls out of an investment early; investment advisory
fees, which are
what Mr. Five Percent wanted to charge me; and 401 (k)
fees, additional expenses for operating and administering retirement plans that employees pay on top of fund management
fees.
I made a similar choice years ago to just believe
what an investment manager offered through my place of employment was telling me, only to later find out that the funds he was putting me in were front
loaded with
fees / etc — like you mention.
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What is that worth to you and how would you prefer to pay for those services (
loads, asset management
fees, hourly rates, flat
fees, etc.)?
Or you can buy a policy directly from an insurance company or from a
fee - only financial advisor —
what's known as a «no
load» or «low
load» policy.
You could make it so there's a transaction
fee to buy into the game — something small like 5 % of the cost of
what you're spending (or a flat rate) is
what it cost to
load them into your collection.