Welcome to
Mutual Fund Performance
Measuring Mutual Fund
Performance
Mutual fund performance can be measured
over a number of different time frames. The investor looks at a
potential mutual fund's history of profits as a guideline on
what might happen tomorrow. A person who puts their money in a
mutual fund is actually spreading their dollars over a number
of different companies.
Make no doubt about it, looking at mutual
fund performance is only a guide; you can still lose money.
Less risky than the stock market because you are invested in a
number of different companies, mutual funds can still lose
money if not managed correctly
Mutual funds usually invest primarily in
stocks and bonds. A fund manager usually has the responsibility
in selecting the mix of stocks and bonds, guided by the mutual
fund's performance prospectus.
History Of
Mutual Funds
The idea of pooling money together for
investment purposes probably started in the mid 1800s in
Europe. The first pooled fund was created in the US by the
staff and faculty of Harvard University in 1893.
In 1924 the first mutual fund was created
when three Boston securities executives pooled their money
together to form the Massachusetts Investor Trust. The
performance was terrific for this very first mutual fund in its
first year. The original assets grew from $50,000 to $392,000
which was spread between 200 individual investors.
Today there are over 10,000 mutual funds
in the US with 83 million investors and 7 trillion dollars in
assets.
The Stock
Market Crash Of 1929
Mutual fund performance went into the
tank when the stock market crashed because most of the mutual
funds had their portfolios full of common stocks just like the
individual investor in the stock market.
In response to the crash, Congress passed
the Securities Act of 1933 and a year later the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. These acts require that the fund be
registered with the Securities Exchange Commission and provide
prospective investors with a prospectus. A prospectus contains
information about the mutual fund's costs, investment
objectives, risks, and performance.
The detailed guidelines for how to behave
as a mutual fund were laid out in the Investment Company Act of
1940.
Individual Retirement Account
(IRA)
The biggest growth factor ever to affect
the mutual fund performance industry occurred when in 1981 the
Individual Retirement Act was passed. This act allowed
individuals who were already in a corporate pension plan to
contribute up to $2,000 a year to a mutual fund. These
individuals correctly felt that their $2,000 investment was
buying them a small piece of many different businesses. In this
manner, people felt they were stockholders who did not have to
deal with stockbrokers.
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