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Finance: What is a Contingent Deferred Sales Charge? 10 Views
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Description:
What is a Contingent Deferred Sales Charge? A Contingent Deferred Sales Charge is a fancy name for a back load fee for mutual fund B shares. Basically, A shares pay a fee at the front when purchased, while with B shares, there is no front load, but a fee when you sell. Either way, they get you coming or going.
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Transcript
- 00:00
Finance a la shmoop. What is a contingent deferred sales charge? Urgh, mouthful all
- 00:10
right well when you buy any flavor of mutual fund you're paying fees that go [Selection of ice creams with mutual fund labels]
- 00:14
to your broker. How you pay these fees which are called loads or commissions,
- 00:20
depends on the type of mutual fund you have and the way you're buying it. [Table of mutual fund types and share types]
- 00:25
A-shares have a front end load. They're the traditional format in which the sale
Full Transcript
- 00:30
of a mutual fund gets commissioned. Meaning you pay your fees to the selling
- 00:34
broker when you buy. So on an individual share sale like at a net asset value in
- 00:40
a mutual fund well you might pay $14.68 for a [The price is highlighted]
- 00:44
share of that mutual fund but net of commission well you start out
- 00:48
compounding your investment at a value of 14 dollars and 37 cents like you paid [The compounded investment is highlighted]
- 00:53
31 cents there in commission. All right next up B-shares, well B-shares carry
- 00:59
what is called a contingent deferred sales charge. That's fancy nomenclature
- 01:05
for quote no-load unquote kinda-sorta in fact what's going on is that the load or [Money going from you to the mutual fund]
- 01:10
commission is paid by the management company responsible for buying and [Money going from the management company to the broker]
- 01:14
selling shares inside of the mutual fund rather than by an upfront sales charge.
- 01:19
Like each year they're essentially paying off the broker his commission for [The management company paying the broker]
- 01:24
selling you that share of the fund, so your fee structure when you pay your
- 01:27
commission upfront might be that the fund costs you one percent a year to be
- 01:31
managed but if you opt for B shares with no commission upfront your annual
- 01:36
fee might be something close to 1.5 percent per year and as long as you hold [The annual fees of each share type are shown]
- 01:42
the mutual fund well say eight years or more, well then you will be
- 01:46
considered to have paid your commission in the form of the extra half a percent [Chart showing the comission prices of both share types being the same after 8 years]
- 01:51
per year that you were charged in these forms of B-shares and if you do the math
- 01:56
you're likely getting a way better deal to just pay your commission upfront and
- 02:01
take the lower fee going forward and remember that contingent thing in there? [The word contingent is circled in the video question]
- 02:06
Well the no-load status of your fund is contingent on you owning
- 02:11
the fund long enough so that the high management fees each year can then go to [Management company paying the broker each year]
- 02:16
pay off the broker if you sell your fund early well then you'll be charged extra
- 02:20
as you exit right. Remember that over time the stock market goes up a lot
- 02:25
usually so why would you want to pay a percentage of your likely increasing [Stock price chart going up]
- 02:29
asset-based annually in the form of higher fee structures rather than lower
- 02:35
fee structures year after year yeah usually financially this doesn't make [Mutual fund performance chart showing increasing value]
- 02:39
sense. So the term here revolves around the notion that your sales charge ie
- 02:43
your commission will have been deferred under the B share structure and the [Deferred stamp]
- 02:47
amount you pay is contingent upon how long you hold the shares and pay the
- 02:50
likely much higher fees annually rather than just biting the bullet up front.
- 02:54
Just as in baseball there's no free lunch in the land of mutual fund buying. [Waiter bring the bill for a guys food]
- 02:59
Yeah, bottom line, do the math.
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