CHAPTER 8
INVESTMENT COMPANIES
AND EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS
TYPE OF INVESTMENT COMPANIES
Open-End Funds (Mutual Funds)
More popularly
known as mutual funds. As open-end funds
they stand ready to buy and redeem shares at a price based on net asset value,
which is total asset value less liabilities. Prices are quoted on a bid/offer
basis. For a no-load fund the bid/offer prices will be the same. The net asset value (NAV) per share equals
the market value of the portfolio minus the liabilities of the mutual fund
divided by the number of shares owned by the mutual fund investors.
There are several
important characteristics of open-end or mutual fund. First, investors in
mutual funds own a pro rata share of the overall portfolio. Second, the
investment manager actively manages the portfolio. Third, the share price is
the NAV. Fourth, the NAV is determined only once each day, at the close of the
day.
In the case of a
load fund the offer price will exceed the bid price by the amount of a sales
commission charged upon purchases of shares. Some funds have back-end loads,
wherein commissions are charged upon redemption of funds within a few years. Others,
known as Section 12b-1 funds, charge a small percentage of assets annually to
cover sales costs. In any case, all funds earn small percentage annual fees to
cover administrative costs. These funds comprise the third largest group of
financial institutions, behind banks and insurance companies.
Closed-End Funds
These funds issue
a limited number of shares and are very similar to shares of common stock. They
are then sold on the open market like other securities. Investors pay a
broker’s commission. The NAV of closed-ended
funds is determined by supply and demand. The market price of these shares
may thus differ from net asset value, often at a discount from it. The discount
results from large tax liabilities on capital gains that swell the net asset
value, while investors are pricing future after-tax distributions. Premiums can
result because such funds often have inexpensive access to overseas stocks.
Under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
closed-end funds are capitalized only once. They make an IPO, and then their
shares are traded on the secondary market, just like any corporate stock.
The relatively
new exchange traded funds (ETFs)
pose a threat to both mutual funds and closed-end funds. ETFs are essentially
hybrid closed-end vehicles, which trade on exchanges but typically trade very
close to NAV.
Unit Trusts
A unit
trust is similar to a closed-end fund in that the number of unit
certificates is fixed. They are different from closed-end funds in the
following. First, they typically invest in bonds. Second, they do not trade. Third,
a fixed amount of securities is assembled with a defined termination date. The
major benefit of such funds is lower operating costs due to the absence of
trading.
FUND SALES CHARGES AND ANNUAL OPERATING
EXPENSES
There are two types of costs borne by
investors in mutual funds. The first is shareholders fee, usually called the sales
charge. This type of charge is related to the way the fund is sold and
distributed. The second cost is the annual fund operating expense usually
called the expense ratio, which covers the fund's expenses. The largest of
which is for investing managements. Other expenses include primarily the cost
of, 1) custody 2) the transfer agent cost, 3) independence public accountant
fee, and 4) directors’ fee. The sum of annual management fee, the annual
distribution fee and other expenses is called the expense ratio.
Sales
Charge
Sales charges on mutual funds are related to
their method of distribution. The two types of distribution were sales force
and direct. Sales force occurs via an intermediary agent. Direct distribution
takes place without an intermediary. Funds with no sales charges are called no-load
mutual funds. Some have speculated that load funds would eventually
disappear, but the trend has gone the other way. Among the recent adaptations
of the sales load are back-end loads.
Annual
Operating Expenses (Expense Ratio)
The operating expense, also called the
expense ratio, is debited annually from the investor’s fund balance by the fund
sponsor. Operating expenses are deducted from NAV and therefore reduce the
reported return. The management fee, also called the investment advisory fee,
is the fee charged by the investment advisor for managing a fund’s
portfolio. In 1980, the SEC approved the imposition of a fixed annual fee,
called the 12b-1 fee, which intended to cover distribution costs. Such
12b-1 fees are now imposed by many mutual funds.
Multiple
Share Classes
Share classes were first offered in 1989
following the SEC’s approval of multiple share class. Initially share classes
were used primarily by sales-force funds to offer alternatives to front-end
load as a means of compensating brokers. Later, some of the funds used
additional share classes as a means of offering the same fund or portfolio
through alternative distribution channels in which some fund expenses varied by
channel.
ECONOMIC MOTIVATIONS FOR FUNDS
An investment
company is a financial intermediary because it pools the funds of market
participants and uses those funds to buy a portfolio of securities. They
provide at least one of the following six economic functions: (1) risk
reduction via diversification, (2) lower costs of contracting and processing
information, (3) professional portfolio management, (4) liquidity, (5) variety,
(6) payments mechanism.
TYPES OF FUNDS BY INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE
Investment funds
tend to have a variety of investment objectives.
In general, there are stock funds, bond funds, money market funds and others.
They seek to accommodate a wide range of desires and needs, among them income,
capital gains, growth, and income. Some funds specialize by securities,
examples of which are indexed funds, government bond funds, municipal bond
funds, corporate bond funds, money market mutual funds, and balanced
funds--combination of bonds and stocks.
CONCEPT OF FAMILY OF FUNDS
Now many
management companies offer investors a choice of numerous funds. Some firms
provide a choice of funds and objectives. Changing from one to the other to
reflect changing needs can then be accomplished at low or no cost to the
investor. The funds in a family usually include choices ranging from money
market funds to global funds, and funds devoted to particular industries such
as medical technology or gold mining companies. Concentration in the mutual
funds industry continues to increase.
INVESTMENT VEHICLES FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
Mutual funds may
be included in different investment vehicles. An investment vehicle can be a
non-qualified vehicle because it does not quality for tax advantages. The same
fund can also be included in a retirement plan such as 401(k), Roth 401(k), IRA
or Roth IRA. These retirement plans are called qualified plans.
MUTUAL FUND COSTS
From 1980 to
2006, the measure of mutual fund costs declined from 2.32% to 1.07% for stock
funds and from 2.05% to 0.84% for bond funds. There were three reasons for this
decline. First, loads in general declined. Second, no-load mutual funds grew.
Third, mutual fund expenses have also declined due to economies of scale and
intense competition.
TAXATION OF MUTUAL FUNDS
Mutual funds must distribute at least 90% of
their net investments income earned, exclusive of realized capital gains or
losses to shareholders to be considered a regulated investment company (RIC)
and, thus not be required to pay taxes at the fund level prior to distribution
to shareholders. Consequently, funds make these distributions. Capital gains
distributions must occur annually, and typically occur late during the calendar
year. New investors in the fund may assume a tax liability even though they
have no gains. The investors must also pay ordinary income taxes on
distribution of income.
REGULATION OF FUNDS
All investment
companies are regulated under the Investment Company Act of 1940. They must
register with the SEC and file periodic reports. No taxes are levied on funds,
which distribute 90% of their income. There are minimum diversification and
liquidity requirements as well as maximum fees that can be applied. Currently
under consideration is a proposal allowing less redemption over a quarter, thus
permitting funds to hold smaller proportions of liquid assets.
Among the recent
SEC priorities, which directly affect mutual funds, are:
1.
Reporting after taxes.
2.
More complete reporting fee.
3.
More accurate and consistent reporting of investment
performance.
4.
Requiring fund investment practices to be more consistent
with the name of a fund to more accurately reflect their investment objectives.
5.
Disclosing portfolio practices such as "window
dressing".
6.
Various rules to increase the effectiveness of
independent fund boards.
STRUCTURE OF A FUND
A mutual fund organization
is structured as follows: (1) board of directors, (2) mutual fund, (3)
investment advisor, (4) distributor, (5) other service providers. The role of
the board of directors is to
represent the fund shareholders. External advisers are called subadvisers, and
they are used because (1) to develop a fund in an area in which the fund family
has no expertise, (2) to improve performance, (3) to increase assets under
management, (4) to obtain an attractive manager at a reasonable cost.
RECENT CHANGES IN THE MUTUAL FUND INDUSTRY
Distribution
Channels
Traditionally, funds were sold direct or
through a sales force. However, funds have moved increasingly to nontraditional
sources of sales.
Supermarkets: The organizer of a supermarket, like Charles
Schwab, offers funds from a number of different mutual fund families.
Wrap programs: Wrap accounts are managed accounts,
typically mutual funds or ETFs, wrapped in a service package. The service
provided is often asset allocation counsel, i.e., advice on the mix of managed
funds or ETFs.
Fee-based
financial advisors: Fee-based
financial advisors are independent financial planners who charge a fee rather
than a transaction charge for investment services. These fees are typically a
percentage of assets under management or alternatively an hourly fee or a fixed
retainer.
Variable
annuities: Variable annuities
represent another distribution channel.
Changes in
the Costs of Purchasing Mutual Funds
The purchase cost of mutual funds has
declined significantly. In general, load funds responded to the competition of
no-load funds by lowering distribution cost.
Mix and
Match
The investors’ demands for choice and
convenience, and also the distributors’ need to appear objective, have
motivated essentially all institutional users of funds and distribution
organizations to offer funds from other fund families in addition to their own.
Domestic
Acquisitions in the US
Funds Market
There merger and acquisition business in the US
asset management business has been active. The US asset management business
continues to grow and consolidate across the various types of asset management
firms.
Internationalization
of the US
Funds Business
The combination of a US fund company and international
asset manager could occur in either two directions, i.e., with either being the
acquirer. But the dominant direction has been the acquisition of US funds by
international institutions.
EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
While mutual funds have become very popular
with investors, they are often criticized for two reasons. First, mutual funds
shares are priced at, and can be transacted only at the end of day (closing)
price. The second relates’ to taxes and the investors’ control over taxes.
Withdrawals by some shareholders may cause taxable realized capital gain for
shareholders who maintain their positions.
Closed-end funds trade all during the day on
stock exchange, but there is often a difference between the NAV and the price
of the closed-end funds. Both mutual funds and closed-end funds are similar in
that they are instruments based on the portfolio of their securities, but
closed-end funds are transacted continuously throughout the day.
An investment that embodies a combination of
the desirable aspects of mutual funds (open-end funds) and closed-end funds is
the exchange-traded fund (ETF). These are mostly index funds. They are
traded on an exchange, and they are like open-end funds in that the number of
shares can change.
ETC
Creation/Redemption Process
For ETCs, individuals do not deal directly
with the provider of the ETF. That privilege is reserved for a few very large
investors called authorized participants (AP) who are arbitragers.
Authorized participants are mainly large institutional traders who have
contractual agreements with ETF funds. They are the only investors who may
create or redeem shares of an ETF with the ETF sponsor and then only in large
specified quantities called creation/redemption units. These unit sizes
range from approximately 50,000 to 100,000 ETF shares.
ETF
Sponsors
Like mutual funds, ETFs require a company to
sponsor them. The ETF sponsor must (1) develop the index, (2) retain the
authorized participants, (3) provide seed capital to initiate the ETF, (4)
advertise and market the ETF, (5) engage in other activities.
Mutual
Funds versus ETFs: Their Relative Advantages
The following are ETF advantages. Mutual
funds are priced only once a day. But ETFs are traded on an exchange and so
there is continuous pricing. Both passive mutual funds and ETFs have low fees,
but ETF fees tend to be somewhat lower. All ETFs trade on an exchange and incur
commission. As to taxes, mutual funds may lead to capital gains taxes for
investors who do not even liquidate their fund. Because of the unique structure
of ETFs, ETFs can fund redemptions by in-kind transfers without selling their
holdings, which have no tax consequences.
Mutual funds have the following advantages.
While ETFs have been exclusively passive or indexes, mutual fund families offer
many types of active funds as well as passive funds. Additionally, no-load
mutual funds, both active and passive, permit transactions with no loads or
commissions.
Separately
Managed Accounts
Many high net worth people object to mutual
funds because (1) lack of control over taxes, (2) lack of any input into
investment decision, (3) absence of services. The use of separately managed
accounts responds to all these limitations of mutual funds.
ANSWERS
TO QUESTIONS FOR CHAPTER 7
(Questions are
in bold print followed by answers.)
1.
An investment company has $1.05
million of assets, $50,000 of liabilities, and 10,000 shares outstanding.
- What is its NAV?
- Suppose the fund pays off its
liabilities while at the same time the value of its assets double. How
many shares will a deposit of $5,000 receive?
a.
Net asset value = (Total assets minus liabilities) / numbers
of shares
= 1,050,000 –
50,000 = $100
10,000
b.
Net asset value = 2,100,000 – 0 = $210
10,000
No
of shares = 5000 = 23.81 shares.
210
2.
“The NAV of an open-end fund is
determined continuously throughout the trading day.” Explain why you agree or
disagree with this statement.
Disagree. NAV of
open-ended fund is the closing price of the day.
3.
What are closed-end funds?
These funds issue
a limited number of shares, are sold on the open market.
4.
Why do some closed-end funds use
leverage to raise more funds rather than issue new shares like mutual funds?
Under the 1940
Act, these funds are capitalized only once. The number of shares is fixed. Thus
many funds become leveraged to raise more funds without issuing new
(additional) shares.
5.
Why might the price of a share of a
closed-end fund diverge from its NAV?
The price of
closed-end funds may differ from NAV (often at a discount) because the fund has
a large built-in tax liabilities and investors are discounting the share’s
price for future tax liabilities. Leverage may be another factor for price
below NAV.
6.
What is the difference between a
unit trust and a closed-end fund?
With a unit trust
a number of securities are assembled in a portfolio package and held for a
specified number of years and then liquidated. The charges are low since there
is no trading of securities or redemption prior to maturity.
7.
- Describe the following: front-end
load, back-end load, level load, 12b-l fee, management fee.
- Is there a limit on the fees that a
mutual fund may charge?
a.
Back-end load funds charge sales fees upon redemption
within a period of a few years.
Front end is commissioned charged up front of the time of sale. A level load is
amount of sales commission a fund may charge. A 12b-1 fund is a no-load fund
that charges an annual sales fee of around 1.5% annually.
b.
Yes the security rule specifies these fees.
8.
Why do mutual funds have different
classes of shares?
Different classes
of shares offered by mutual funds is determined by the needs of the investors
and their risk preferences. It permits the distributor and its client to select
the type of load they prefer.
9.
What is an index fund?
An index fund e.g.
Fidelity Magellan and Vanguard S&P 500 are mutual funds, which invests in
stocks included in S&P 500, and aim to achieve its performance to the
benchmark S&P500 returns.
10.
- What is meant by a target-date fund?
- What is the motivation for the creation
of such a fund?
a.
Target date funds are mutual funds that base their
asset allocations on a specific date, the assumed retirement date for the
investor, and then rebalance to a more conservative allocation as that date
approaches.
b.
These funds are designed to be “one-size-fits-all”
portfolios for investors with a given number of years to retirement.
11.
What are the costs incurred by a
mutual fund?
Costs typically
incurred by an investment company (Mutual fund) include advisory fees,
selling/marketing expenses, custodial/accounting fees, and transactions costs.
There are two types of costs borne by investors in mutual funds. The first is
shareholder fee, usually called the sales charge. This type of charge is
related to the way the fund is sold or distributed. The second cost is the
annual fund operating expense usually called the expense ratio, which covers
the fund’s expenses. The largest of which is for investing managements.
12.
Why might the investor in a mutual
fund be faced with a potential tax liability arising from capital gains even
though the investor did not benefit from such a gain?
Investor in a
closed fund is faced with a potential tax gain on capital gains that swell the
net asset value. The investor is pricing future-tax distributions.
13.
Does an investment company provide
any economic function that individual investors cannot provide for themselves
on their own? Explain your answer.
Yes. An
investment company provides risk reduction through diversification and lower
costs of transactions and information processing, which is hardly to come by an
individual investor.
14.
Why might a family of funds hire
subadvisors for some of its funds?
They are used
because (1) to develop a fund in an area in which the fund family has no expertise,
(2) to improve performance, (3) to increase assets under management, (4) to
obtain an attractive manager at a reasonable cost.
15.
- How can a fund qualify as a regulated
investment company?
- What is the benefit in gaming this
status?
a.
A regulated investment company must provide information
on its fees and its objectives. It must file financial reports and indicate
amount of income distributed.
b.
A regulated investment company is exempt from taxation
on all its ordinary and capital gains income as long as at least 90% of these
funds are distributed to the stockholders. Such distributions are then taxable
to the stockholders.
16. What is an ETF?
An exchanged
traded fund is a new investment vehicle that is similar to mutual funds but
trade like a stock on an exchange. The price is determined continuously rather
than the closing price e.g. QQQ.
17.
What are the advantages of an ETF
relative to open-end and closed-end investment companies?
As said earlier,
price is continuously changing during the trading period.
18.
Explain the role of the authorized
participant in an ETF.
The role of the
authorized participants is to engage in arbitrage transactions that maintain
the market price of the ETF as compared to an index portfolio.
19.
Why is tracking error important for
an ETF?
Since ETFs are
based on passive indexes where value is represented by the NAV, investors in
ETFs expect their return to be equal to that of the portfolio’s NAV. Large
tracking error s are bad for ETFs because it undermines the investor’s
expectation.
20.
Comment on the following statement:
“Exchange traded funds are typically actively managed funds.”
Since they are
mostly index funds, they are passively managed.
21.
Briefly describe the following in
the context of mutual funds:
- supermarket
- wrap program
- segregated managed accounts
- family of
funds
a.
Supermarkets: The introduction of the first mutual fund
supermarket in 1992 by Charles Schwab & Co.
introduced its One Source service. These supermarkets allow investors to
purchase funds from participating companies without investors having to contact
each fund company.
b.
Wrap program: Wrap accounts are managed accounts,
typically mutual funds “wrapped” in a service package. The service provided is
often asset allocation counsel; that is advice on the mix of managed funds.
c.
Segregated managed accounts: are in response to
individuals who object to mutual funds because of their lack of control over
taxes and other investment decisions. Many investors with medium-size portfolio
are utilizing segregated accounts.
d.
Family of funds: In the U.S. system, a family of funds
consists of an investment company that offers several different funds. In Japan the
family fund allows investors to buy new certificates in a grouping of existing
unit trusts.
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