Types of Funds
Types of Funds
Types of Funds
Not too many years ago, mutual funds were simply broad-based
investment instruments created to simplify the intricacies involved in
investing in separate securities. They also provided a greater measure of
safety through broad diversification and the kind of top notch professional
management that is usually out of reach for the small investor.
Today, however, mutual funds are highly specialized and offer almost
unlimited diversity. The types of mutual fund portfolios available run the
gamut from conservative to aggressive, from stocks to bonds, from
domestic to international portfolios, from taxable to tax-free, and from
virtually no-risk money market funds to high-risk options funds. The great
variety of mutual funds available makes it possible to select a fund, or
several funds, which precisely various types of funds and their primary
objectives are described below. (They are arranged in order of increasing
risk factors)
Specifically, a money market fund is a mutual fund that invests its assets
only in the most liquid of money instruments. The portfolio seeks stability
by investing in very short-term, interest-bearing instruments issued by
the state and local governments, banks, and large corporations. The
money invested is a loan to these agencies, and the length of the loan
might range from overnight to one week or, in some cases, as long as 90
days. These debt certificates are called "money market instruments";
because they can be converted into cash so readily, they are considered
the equivalent of cash.
Income Funds
The risk / reward potential is low to high, depending upon the type of
securities that make up the fund's portfolio. The risk is very low when the
fund is invested in government obligations, blue chip corporations, and
short-term agency securities. The risk is high when a fund seeks higher
yields by investing in long-term corporate bonds, offered by new,
undercapitalized, risky companies.
§ Investors seeking current income higher than money market rates, who
are willing to accept moderate price fluctuations
§ Investors willing to "balance" their equity (stock) portfolios with a fixed
income investment
§ Investors who want a portfolio of taxable bonds with differing maturity
dates
§ Investors interested in receiving periodic income on a regular basis.
The primary objectives of growth and income funds are to seek long-term
growth of principal and reasonable current income. By investing in a
portfolio of stocks believed to offer growth potential plus market or above
- market dividend income, the fund expects to investors seeking growth
of capital and moderate income over the long term (at least five years)
would consider growth and income funds. Such funds require that the
investor be willing to accepts some share-price volatility, but less than
found in pure growth funds.
Balanced Funds
Growth Funds
Growth funds are best suited for investors interested primarily in seeing
their principal grow and are therefore to be considered as long-term
investments - held for at least three to five years. Jumping in and out of
growth funds tends to defeat their purpose. However, if the fund has not
shown substantial growth over a three - to five-year period, sell it
(redeem your shares) and seek a growth fund with another investment
company.
An index mutual fund may never outperform the market but it should not
lag far behind it either. The reduction of administrative cost in the
management of an index fund also adds to its profitability.
Sector Funds
Investors in sector funds must be prepared to accept the rather high level
of risk inherent in funds that are not particularly diversified. Any measure
of diversification that may exist in sector funds is attained through a
variety of securities, albeit in the same market sector. Substantial profits
are attainable by investors astute enough to identify which market sector
is ripe for growth - not always an easy task!
Specialized Funds
Those who are still novices in the investment arena should avoid both
specialized and sector funds or the time being and concentrate on the
more traditional, diversified mutual funds instead.
Islamic Funds
Bruce Jacobs, All About Mutual Funds, McGraw Hills I-nc. 2001, Pg. 17.