Search

 

 

New Page 1 New Page 1

Informative Articles

401(k) Plans
I’ve been in and interested in the stock market so long (one year shy of forty years) I can remember when the mutual fund pages in my home town paper were just one page! Now it looks like there are more mutual funds then there are stocks listed on...

Buy and Hold: How to Perpetuate Your Investment Losses
A recent cartoon in my daily newspaper showed two guys sitting in a bar. One is saying to the other: “I did learn something from my broker...how to diversify my investment losses.” While this struck me as funny, there is certainly an element...

Frog Is In The Pot
You remember the story about the frog that was put into a pot of cold water on the stove. He was not concerned. Someone lit the burner and the water began getting warm, the frog was very comfortable and as the water became warmer he was so...

Simple Strategies to Making Financial Gain
Now is a great time to make it a habit to manage your resources instead of your resources managing you. What is meant by that when we are stating that "Your money manages you?" Here is a well known example: There is more month than there is...

The Psychology of Markets
VIX and the Psychology of Markets We know that greed and fear rule the markets. But did you know that when investors gets too greedy, markets usually fall, and when investors are overcome with fear, markets usually rise. So how can when we...

 
Brain-Dead Mutual Fund Selection

About this time every year, the personal finance magazines will perform an annual ritual: Looking at how mutual funds have performed over the past year—and then using that information to suggest which mutual funds you should pick for the coming year.
Sadly, this work is a complete waste of time.

It’s the class that matters most

Choosing a mutual fund, all the research data show, is actually very straightforward and simple. Most of your performance depends on the asset class you select. In other words, the biggest, most important, and most significant decision you make is whether you want to put money into stocks, bonds, money market accounts, real estate, or some other class, such as international stocks.

Cost is the second factor to consider

Within a given class of investments, such as stocks, the research shows that the most significant characteristic that determines the goodness of the investment is the expense ratio charged by the mutual fund management company. For example, if one mutual fund company charges you 2 percent of your fund balance to manage your investments and another company charges you .2 of a percent, almost invariably, the mutual fund charging the lower expense ratio will do better over long periods of time.

Asset allocation for lazy people

When you understand the importance of asset allocation and investment costs, picking a mutual fund boils down to two simple issues. The first issue is how you want to apportion your money between stocks, bonds, and other investments. Typically, you want to have the majority of your long-term investment money in stocks, some portion in bonds to reduce the volatility of your investment portfolio, and some portion of your money—perhaps your rainy day fund—in something like a money market account.

The second issue you need to focus on in selecting a mutual fund is the expense ratio. Fortunately, the Internet and Money’s hyperlinks let you rather easily get to mutual fund prospectuses, and these materials provide expense ratio information. This is where you want to start—and probably

Associated Websites

Associated Websites

 

Our Blogs are on UK small business and being a UK freelancer or contractor as well as website marketing and web design. If you are a biker we can help with your motor bike insurance.

 

We have a site for contractors  and sites for HomeloansUK and PR-Help. We provide Branding help and offer Free-Marketing-Help and help for IT contractors. For E-commerce information, visit Small-Business-Web. We offer Page Rank Web Links and Cheap Home Loans Direct plus 0-BadDebtLoans and more Cheap Home Loans Direct. Our sites also help with Negotiation of any Personal-Secured-Loans. Our site called Management-Today can help you Innovate-Today, but for more loans go to 1st4HomeLoans.

 

Our HomeLoansUK site is affiliated with Branding and TrafficBuilding sites and Sales technique site. Also on offer is Beauty-Online and FreeNetDesign. If you are a  contractor and need help with a Small-Business-Web then our E-Commerce site is great. If you want Easy-Mortgages or even 1st-4-Tenant-Loans go to 5-Star-Mortgages. We help find Cheap Kitchen Appliances and Low Rate Home Loans. For the IT contractor, EstuaryFinance can refer you to our Online IR35 Compliance site for help with IR35.


finish—your mutual fund investing. You almost can’t win if you choose a mutual fund with a very high expense ratio. You almost can’t lose if you choose a mutual fund with a very low expense ratio.

Why not try to beat the market?

Let me also briefly address the issue of finding a mutual fund manager who generates above average returns. Clearly, some mutual fund managers, over time, have produced extraordinary returns—returns so high that they more than offset even large expense ratios. The point you need to realize, however, is that if you do choose to look for a star mutual fund performer, what you need to do right now is identify somebody who is going to be a star over the next two or three decades, not someone who has been a star over the past two or three decades. Long-term investing means you are looking out several decades into the future—even if you are retired.

Note, too, that who performed well last year is no indication of who is going to perform this year. Repeatedly, studies have shown that last year’s or last quarter’s hot performer is not this year’s or this quarter’s hot performer.

Putting my money where my mouth is

Here’s my personal investment strategy. I am a firm believer in index funds. Through the late 1990s, I invested almost my entire portfolio (perhaps 95 percent or more) in the widest available stock index fund available to me. In the late 1990s, after the stock market became obviously over-valued (I said this in print in books like the Millionaire Kit (Random House, 1999), I began using balanced index funds (which index both stocks and bonds).


About the Author: Seattle tax CPA & author Stephen L. Nelson wrote Quicken for Dummies and more than 100 other books as well. Nelson holds an MBA in Finance and an MS in taxation. His web site is http://www.stephenlnelson.com

Source: www.isnare.com