Archive for the ‘Mutual funds’ Category

Efficient Mutual Fund Investing by Avoiding Taxes

Mutual funds have been one of the safest avenues for many American to invest for the future whether its for retirement or kids education. Mutual fund companies have gained their reputation by showing good returns and solid growth. Many mutual fund companies have evolved strongly by good fund analysis with strong results and catering to various needs of the investor gaining investor sentiment from novice to veterans.



Many of us invest in mutual funds because it is bit safe and saves time as the fund managers are paid to do the job of portfolio analysis, effective investment by incorporating diversification and asset allocation strategies according to each fund’s goal. Another main reason, mutual funds are less expensive for amount of diversification and assets involved in the funds. If someone has to do the same kinda of diversification, it would cost more on transaction fees alone not to add other cost. So it is not prudent unless you have big asset to handle.



Above all, we look for good, solid return and performance. On the downside, we really don’t pay attention to the taxes on mutual fund earnings. We all know not all mutual funds are made equal but all them have the tax component associated with it. Taxes can be biggest drag on the funds performance. Every year many investors lose certain percentage points of fund returns because they don’t try to lower their taxes.



It is not a big science or need to learn lot of tax codes to implement it. Just by keeping certain aspects of tax saving concepts in mind and adapting them which will help you portfolio. Here is the list of 3 simple strategies/concepts you can follow while trying to invest in mutual funds.



1. Low Turnover Ratio – Check for a fund’s portfolio turnover ratio which is the percentage of its assets that were sold during the most recent quarter or year. If the fund has high turnover ration mean it is a more aggressive fund. For example, a turnover of 500% means a fund sold the equivalent of its entire portfolio of securities five times during the year. That raises a fund’s expenses, and the likelihood of capital gains taxes. It is a good idea to limit your tax consequences by avoiding funds that trade most of their holdings in a given year. That means being wary of turnover ratios above 50%.



2. After-tax Return – Like you calculate any material cost after taxes, calculate fund tax return after taxes. So look beyond a mutual fund’s pretax return is wise thing to do. After tax returns will give the right picture of profit margin after all the tax deductions. The tax-adjusted return accounts for capital gains, dividends and interest.


3. Capital Gain – If you are worried about big tax bill, it is good idea to analyze a funds possible capital gain exposure before you buy it. Possible exposure tallies capital gains that haven’t been distributed to shareholders and divides that number by total net assets.


If you don’t want to go through the head-ache of analysing every funds, you have option to go with tax-efficient funds or ETF’s.



Tax Efficient funds, also called as Tax Advantage  funds, are structured and operated on reducing the tax liability faced by its shareholders. It uses variety of techniques to keep the taxes low by purchasing tax-free (or low taxed) investments such as municipal bonds, Low turnover ratio, Offsetting gains by selling other stocks at a loss and Investing in lower-dividend-paying stocks to minimize passthrough dividends.



In conclusion, mutual fund investment can really reap better rewards if you give little bit of attention every year and plan accordingly by lowering taxes.



Source and read article at usatoday.com

Good news for Small Investors from Vanguard

Vanguard is always considered to be best among the bunch on mutual fund arena. They maintain their high standard in many ways by giving expense ratio less on their fund, high minimim fund required to open an account, knowledgeable managers doing good job analyzing the market well enough to manage the fund and so much more. 

If you are wondering what I mean Target funds? Target funds have been famous for some years now for retirement and education portfolios. The fund is diversified to have different asset classes depending on the target year. It uses sliding asset allocator model. They usually start with aggressive on stocks and become more conservative with bonds over time.

For example, if you are 35 and you selected the target year for retirement to be 2041 and chose 2040 target fund. The asset allocation in the fund will be more aggressive with stocks 90% and bonds 10% as an example. Once the years progress,the asset allocation changes to 50-50% and later to 20%-80% and so forth

Until last week, they had minimum $3000 required to open any funds including Target Retirement fund. Since last week, they relaxed the requirement and made a big move to cut down their minimum open fund needed. Now an young investor who like to take advantage of the vanguard Target Retirement portfolio, they only need $1000. It is a smart move by them to attract young, small time investors.

Check out more details at vanguard.com

Obama Economy – Stock Picks 2009 – Long Term

Today, the biggest ever stimulus package of $819 billion is been approved by the senate. Its a first victory for Mr. President Obama. He has got of stake in this new stimulus package and we all hope it works. But many analyst thinks with money going to public sector in developing infracture like bridges and so forth. We won’t see the benefit until for 1- 2 years.

Taking that foreword, many analyst are focusing on stocks which has focal point towards infrastructure like Catepillar (CAT), Maintowo (MTW) who all makes some machineries really needed for the infrastructure growth. Also

I would bet my dollar with CAT as they just laid off few thousand and its selling 42% below its high, P/E ratio of 5.83. It also yields 5% dividend which is sweet. In conclusion, its really a good buy as a long term investor (2-3) years.

Another good one, GS – Goldmann Sachs which follows real conservative methods in investing. They performed real well last year and only announced their first loss ever in the last quarter. They will be the first one to pay back the TARP loans. They are selling in 50% discount from 52 week high. A good buy for long run.

Next Healthcare industry. An Industry which is always envyed by others because of its recession proof characterization.  In 2008, the S&P 500 fell 37%, while the healthcare industry fell 24.5%. Some good ones from the bunch are, Johnson&Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT), Merck (NYSE:MRK) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE:BMY), Pfizer (PFE) and Wyeth.

JNJ was considered a strong company until it got hit by serious of patent cases. Currently, Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) faces no such issues in its drug portfolio. Further, it experiences strong growth in all of its business segments across the globe. It dropped by only 4% last year. Thus, Abbott’s solid relative performance and its sound operating fundamentals will position it as a leader in the pharmaceutical industry for some time to come.