A mutual fund is a professionally-managed form of collective investments that pools money from many investors and invests it in stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, and/or other securities. In a mutual fund, the fund manager, who is also known as the portfolio manager, trades the fund's underlying securities, realizing capital gains or losses, and collects the dividend or interest income. The investment proceeds are then passed along to the individual investors. The value of a share of the mutual fund, known as the net asset value per share (NAV), is calculated daily based on the total value of the fund divided by the number of shares currently issued and outstanding.



Legally known as an "open-end company" under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the primary regulatory statute governing investment companies), a mutual fund is one of three basic types of investment companies available in the United States.[2] Outside of the United States (with the exception of Canada, which follows the U.S. model), mutual fund maybe used as a generic term for various types of collective investment vehicle. In the United Kingdom and western Europe (including offshore jurisdictions), other forms of collective investment vehicle are prevalent, including unit trusts, open-ended investment companies (OEICs), SICAVs and unitized insurance funds. In Australia and New Zealand the term "mutual fund" is generally not used; the name "managed fund" is used instead.


HistoryMassachusetts Investors Trust (now MFS Investment Management) was founded on March 21, 1924, and, after one year, had 200 shareholders and $392,000 in assets. The entire industry, which included a few closed-end funds, represented less than $10 million in 1924.


The stock market crash of 1929 slowed the growth of mutual funds. In response to the stock market crash, Congress passed the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These laws require that a fund be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and provide prospective investors with a prospectus that contains required disclosures about the fund, the securities themselves, and fund manager. The SEC helped draft the Investment Company Act of 1940, which sets forth the guidelines with which all SEC-registered funds today must comply.


With renewed confidence in the stock market, mutual funds began to blossom. By the end of the 1960s, there were approximately 270 funds with $48 billion in assets. The first retail index fund, the First Index Investment Trust, was formed in 1976 and headed by John Bogle, who conceptualized many of the key tenets of the industry in his 1951 senior thesis at Princeton University. It is now called the Vanguard 500 Index Fund and is one of the largest mutual funds ever with over $100 billion in assets.


One of the largest contributors of mutual fund growth was individual retirement account (IRA) provisions added to the Internal Revenue Code in 1975, allowing individuals (including those already in corporate pension plans) to contribute $2,000 a year. Mutual funds are now popular in employer-sponsored defined contribution retirement plans (401(k)s), IRAs and Roth IRAs.




As of April 2006, there are 8,606 mutual funds that belong to the Investment Company Institute (ICI), the national association of investment companies in the United States, with combined assets of $9.207 trillion.

UsageMutual funds can invest in many different kinds of securities. The most common are cash, stock, and bonds, but there are hundreds of sub-categories. Stock funds, for instance, can invest primarily in the shares of a particular industry, such as technology or utilities. These are known as sector funds. Bond funds can vary according to risk (e.g., high-yield junk bonds or investment-grade corporate bonds), type of issuers (e.g., government agencies, corporations, or municipalities), or maturity of the bonds (short- or long-term). Both stock and bond funds can invest in primarily U.S. securities (domestic funds), both U.S. and foreign securities (global funds), or primarily foreign securities (international funds).
Most mutual funds' investment portfolios are continually adjusted under the supervision of a professional manager, who forecasts the future performance of investments appropriate for the fund and chooses those which he or she believes will most closely match the fund's stated investment objective. A mutual fund is administered through a parent management company, which may hire or fire fund managers.
Mutual funds are liable to a special set of regulatory, accounting, and tax rules. Unlike most other types of business entities, they are not taxed on their income as long as they distribute substantially all of it to their shareholders. Also, the type of income they earn is often unchanged as it passes through to the shareholders. Mutual fund distributions of tax-free municipal bond income are also tax-free to the shareholder. Taxable distributions can be either ordinary income or capital gains, depending on how the fund earned those distributions.




Net asset valueMain article: Net asset valueThe net asset value, or NAV, is the current market value of a fund's holdings, usually expressed as a per-share amount. For most funds, the NAV is determined daily, after the close of trading on some specified financial exchange, but some funds update their NAV multiple times during the trading day. The public offering price, or POP, is the NAV plus a sales charge. Open-end funds sell shares at the POP and redeem shares at the NAV, and so process orders only after the NAV is determined. Closed-end funds (the shares of which are traded by investors) may trade at a higher or lower price than their NAV; this is known as a premium or discount, respectively. If a fund is divided into multiple classes of shares, each class will typically have its own NAV, reflecting differences in fees and expenses paid by the different classes.


Some mutual funds own securities which are not regularly traded on any formal exchange. These may be shares in very small or bankrupt companies; they may be derivatives; or they may be private investments in unregistered financial instruments (such as stock in a non-public company). In the absence of a public market for these securities, it is the responsibility of the fund manager to form an estimate of their value when computing the NAV. How much of a fund's assets may be invested in such securities is stated in the fund's prospectus.
TurnoverTurnover is a measure of the fund's securities transactions, usually calculated over a year's time, and usually expressed as a percentage of net asset value.
This value is usually calculated as the value of all transactions (buying, selling) divided by 2 divided by the fund's total holdings; i.e., the fund counts one security sold and another one bought as one "turnover". Thus turnover measures the replacement of holdings.
In Canada, under NI 81-106 (required disclosure for investment funds) turnover ratio is calculated based on the lesser of purchases or sales divided by the average size of the portfolio (including cash).
Turnover generally has tax consequences for a fund, which are passed through to investors. In particular, when selling an investment from its portfolio, a fund may realize a capital gain, which will ultimately be distributed to investors as taxable income. The process of buying and selling securities also has its own costs, such as brokerage commissions, which are borne by the fund's shareholders.



Specail Topicslink น่าสนใจ เกี่ยวกับประกันภัยรถยนต์ ป.1
http://www.pkinsure.com/asia-insurance.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/index1.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/apply.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/วิริยะประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/อาคเนย์ประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/msigประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ประกันภัยไทยวิวัฒน์.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/นำสินประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/เอเชียประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/แอลเอ็มจีประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ไทยไพบูลย์ประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ชาร์ทิสประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/กมลประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/อินทรประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/เมืองไทยประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ฟินิกซ์ประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ประกันคุ้มภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/มิตรแท้ประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/คูเนียประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/เทเวศประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/บีทีประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/เอราวัณประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/เจ้าพระยาประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ไทยเศรษฐกิจประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ศรีเมืองประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/ไทยศรีประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/อลิอันซ์ซีพีประกันภัย.htm
http://www.pkinsure.com/สินมั่นคงประกันภัย.htm







http://www.aia-thailand.com
http://www.aia-thailand.com/aboutus.htm
http://www.aia-thailand.com/market.htm
http://www.aia-thailand.com/news.htm
http://www.aia-thailand.com/contact.htm
http://www.aia-thailand.com/career.htm
aia AIA เอไอเอ รับสมัครตัวแทนประกันชีวิต สมัครตัวแทนประกันตัวแทนประกันชีวิต รายได้พิเศษ งานประจำ งาน part time ธุรกิจส่วนตัว ประกันกลุ่ม ประกันสุขภาพ