Not exact matches
Sure, a balance of $ 1000 will
yield a
lesser interest
charge than say $ 1500.
--
less fees: even though ETF fees are much smaller than mutual funds, they do
charge more than holding those stocks directly — more control: being able to select your type of portfolio, holding stocks that you believe in and going for the stocks that you know and targeting the
yield that matches you — more fun?
On the other hand, dividend investors raise strong points: —
less fees: even though ETF fees are much smaller than mutual funds, they do
charge more than holding those stocks directly — more control: being able to select your type of portfolio, holding stocks that you believe in and going for the stocks that you know and targeting the
yield that matches you — more fun?
The High
Yield Fund
charges a 2 % redemption fee on shares held 90 days or
less.
The SEC
charges said PlexCorps marketed and sold securities called PlexCoin since August, and claimed investments in PlexCoin would
yield a 1,354 percent profit in
less than 29 days.