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History Of Mutual
Fund Families
Mutual fund families are the
array of mutual funds offered by a single mutual fund company.
The different types of mutual funds offered will vary by the
risk and investment objectives of each. The advantage of mutual
fund families is that they appeal to a larger group of
investors, thus increasing the client base.
There is a whole spectrum of
fund choices available to investors including funds that focus
on small growth companies, international companies, technology
companies, large value companies, and emerging
markets
The Beginnings
The history of mutual funds
began in 1924 when the very first mutual fund was created by
three Boston securities executives when they founded the
Massachusetts Investor Trust. In only one year the assets of
the company grew from $50,000 to $392,000.
Over the next five years,
mutual fund families began to be offered by investment
companies. The over-confident investor was allowed to borrow
money to invest in the market at a two to one ratio. That meant
if he had $100 cash to invest, he could borrow $200 more to
invest. This type of loose financial activity, with no
regulation, caused the greatest financial turmoil ever to occur
in the world to happen: the crash of 1929.
Securities Act And
Securities Exchange Act
These two acts, passed in
1933-34, required that each mutual fund and/or investment
company be registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. It also required that each company had to produce a
prospectus and make it available to every potential investor.
This prospectus should provide information about the company's
costs, investment objectives, risks, and past
performance.
Families of mutual funds,
offered by investment companies, got a big boost in value and
consumer confidence when the Investment Company Act of 1940 was
passed. This new law set separate standards by which investment
companies should be regulated. The act's purpose stated in the
bill was to protect the national interest as well as the
interests of the private investor. It assumed the power to act
as a regulator in disputes between investment companies and
security exchanges. Now the average citizen had a course of
action if he felt he got cheated by an investment
company.
The Future
The future of mutual fund
families looks to be terrific in the long run. Today, just in
the U.S., there are over 10,000 mutual funds, a majority of
which are being offered in mutual fund families.
One of the biggest reasons
for the success of investment companies that offer mutual fund
families is that for a small investment you can own a small
share of a lot of different companies.
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