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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, The Math of Fees 3 Views
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Description:
So what's the math involved when figuring out fees? How much cash should a mutual fund have on hand? You've got questions - we've got answers.
Transcript
- 00:01
No principles of finance ah la shmoop the math of
- 00:07
fees All right well now that we've learned about how
- 00:10
they stack up the benjamins let's get down to the
- 00:12
reason that mutual funds exists all right couple reasons here
- 00:16
first they allow individuals to gain exposure to a wide
Full Transcript
- 00:20
range of investment vehicles without having to invest like eighteen
- 00:24
billion dollars in a jillion different stocks to do so
- 00:27
well Second mutual funds exist because well there was a
- 00:30
time in history when actively managed funds handily beat the
- 00:36
passively managed or unmanaged world of index funds or the
- 00:40
stock market and they beat it by a wide enough
- 00:43
margin that the spread more than covered the fees and
- 00:46
taxes that the mutual fund industry charge But well that
- 00:51
isn't true anymore in today's fastly more competitive than the
- 00:54
world of nineteen sixty eight world So why do people
- 00:59
still invest and actively managed mutual funds Good question there
- 01:04
weeks psychology They need the emotional hand holding When the
- 01:07
market has a bad hair day they didn't watch shmoop
- 01:11
well they're fund broker and gave them that awesome front
- 01:14
row said a seats at the n b a game
- 01:17
Last saturday night and well they didn't do the math
- 01:19
on just how much those tickets actually cost them over
- 01:22
the next twenty years is paid fees on mutual funds
- 01:26
broker sold them well we really don't know why people
- 01:29
invest in managed funds anymore it's pretty much a dying
- 01:32
industry today there's almost nobody ever in any five or
- 01:36
ten year period of time who after fees and taxes
- 01:40
beats index funds Why Well a bunch of reasons the
- 01:43
biggest is that funds have to fight hard for what's
- 01:46
called shelf space yet like in a grocery store but
- 01:49
it's in a stock brokerage to get sold through broker
- 01:52
channels or other places where people buy mutual funds and
- 01:56
that costs money so small funds get ignored and there's
- 01:59
always a lot of pressure for mutual funds to get
- 02:02
bigger so they can charge more fees and pay more
- 02:04
for distribution Well the best way to get bigger would
- 02:07
be to just have superior performance and let your numbers
- 02:10
do the talkin right Like michael phelps doesn't have to
- 02:13
pound his chest about how great a swimmer he is
- 02:15
right Why Well you can't see his chest it's covered
- 02:19
With a whole bunch of olympic gold medals there yeah
- 02:22
so funds spend a lot of resource is trying to
- 02:26
get bigger marketing wise rather than better investing wise and
- 02:32
they do try to be better They're sincere they work
- 02:34
hard They all want to be one flavor or another
- 02:37
of the michael jordan of investing who's named warren buffett
- 02:42
in real life Unfortunately for the mutual fund industry however
- 02:46
well they have all kinds of ugly headwinds in their
- 02:48
face One big headwind comes in the form that mutual
- 02:51
funds have to hold back a certain amount of cash
- 02:54
because well just in the wrong time Retail investors like
- 03:00
you know mon pa kettle well they redeem their mutual
- 03:03
fund shares I'ii sell them and they put the money
- 03:06
in the mattress Historically most mutual fund redemptions come near
- 03:10
the bottom of these ugly bear markets right at the
- 03:13
time when investors really will have wanted to start investing
- 03:16
or then getting them exposed to mutual funds and high
- 03:19
risk rather than taking all the risk off the table
- 03:23
So mutual funds always have to carry a meaningful amount
- 03:26
of cash like five or ten percent in case those
- 03:29
redemption suddenly hit but if you step back a little
- 03:32
bit lou that's too far there that's better Alright well
- 03:36
overtime markets go up on average growth index is go
- 03:40
up eight to ten percent a year So with dividends
- 03:43
reinvested over long periods of time so just the fact
- 03:47
that a mutual fund might need to keep say ten
- 03:49
percent cash in a world going up but ten percent
- 03:53
of years to get the math easy here Well that
- 03:55
mutual fund by being required to carry cash is losing
- 03:59
one percent a year in performance and that's just the
- 04:02
g rated problem The pg thirteen problem is that mutual
- 04:05
funds are relatively expensive A typical index fund might charge
- 04:10
half a percent a year to manage your money or
- 04:12
a whole lot last The big ones like spy charge
- 04:15
more like point two percent And just so we're sure
- 04:18
you have the decimals Right That is for each hundred
- 04:20
dollars you invest in spy run by vanguard You pay
- 04:24
twenty cents a year right Like a little less than
- 04:27
two cents a month for managing your hundred bucks Pretty
- 04:30
cheap and analogous Mutual fund would cost one hundred basis
- 04:33
Points more than that i e one percentage point or
- 04:37
more like two percent three percent and many mutual funds
- 04:40
carry up front loads or commissions paid to the broker
- 04:43
who got you those nice and tickets what's the most
- 04:46
species mutual funds market themselves as no load funds which
- 04:51
is a complete darth vader resc joke Darth doesn't tell
- 04:56
jug so this is no joke either so we're dividing
- 04:59
load with commission and no load funds Well no load
- 05:03
means roughly this Instead of charging you a load to
- 05:07
get into the fund we're going to charge you one
- 05:09
and a half percent a year for managing your money
- 05:12
forever So do the math If you remain to fund
- 05:15
holder for twenty years from attacks perspective it's very expensive
- 05:19
to ever sell a fund more on this soon In
- 05:21
more videos you'd have paid one point five percent in
- 05:24
fees for twenty years and the fees or set based
- 05:27
on the amount of money you have So as the
- 05:29
market goes up and the value of your investment goes
- 05:32
up while you get charged mohr generally speaking meaning that
- 05:36
if you started with ten grand and were charged one
- 05:38
hundred fifty bucks a year to manage that money Well
- 05:41
when it doubled to twenty thousand dollars eight years later
- 05:44
you're charged three hundred dollars a year to manage it
- 05:47
Why when it doubles again forty thousand eight years later
- 05:49
and here your charge six hundred dollars to manage it
- 05:52
and that fund might have the exact same basket of
- 05:54
stocks which all went up about the same amount here
- 05:57
after year but now it costs you six times as
- 06:00
much for the privilege of having those same stocks you
- 06:02
coulda bought yourself all right We'll compare this with a
- 06:04
load fund load funds charge Ah hi fi if you
- 06:08
invest on ly very small amounts of money largely because
- 06:12
the paperwork and add wins expensive to manage but by
- 06:15
the time you're investing ten thousand dollars well loads are
- 06:19
usually pretty low like two ish percent but then the
- 06:22
annual fee is more like zero point seven percent So
- 06:25
if you do the math from above yes you get
- 06:27
hitting your one with that commission or load And yes
- 06:31
it cost you a relative bundle if you sell after
- 06:33
only a year or two but if you're like ninety
- 06:36
Eight percent of the world and hold your fund for
- 06:38
over five years in a very large percentage Hold it
- 06:41
over twenty years Well any of more than made back
- 06:45
the no load gimmick and then some Well But all
- 06:48
of this pales compared with the fees charged by index
- 06:51
funds which are almost entirely no lo and almost always
- 06:55
way last than half the annual fee of manage funds
- 06:58
and so on But we're moving on here Here's the
- 07:00
r rated problem with managed funds versus unmanaged funds taxes
- 07:06
managed funds manage That means they buy and sell stocks
- 07:10
They sell the winners and they buy the losers While
- 07:13
each time of fund recognizes a gang sells an investment
- 07:17
for a profit the fund shareholder gets taxed Let's make
- 07:21
up a prototypical fund here it realizes gains in two
- 07:24
ways Short term and long term well short term gains
- 07:28
are gains garnered inside of one year long term means
- 07:32
they held the investment over a year and then sold
- 07:35
it you The shareholder in the fund gets taxed both
- 07:38
ways as well of course and short term gains generally
- 07:41
must be distributed back out to shareholders in the form
- 07:44
Of an annual gain on which investors ben pay ordinary
- 07:47
income tax so for fund is twenty percent of their
- 07:50
gains realized and they are short term gains in a
- 07:53
typical investor pays thirty five percent marginal tax on that
- 07:56
game Which berries on your region I it'll be more
- 07:59
in california new york and less in wyoming taxes are
- 08:02
a big headwind managed funds have you got all this
- 08:05
together and you have a one percent headwind from having
- 08:08
hold cash Another fee headwind of another center too Got
- 08:12
a whole lot of realized gain headwinds from taxes and
- 08:15
all that stuff Well then yes index funds and etfs
- 08:18
which are very similar Well they do realize gains every
- 08:21
now and then but they realize that very small for
- 08:23
action of the gains that mutual funds realized because index
- 08:26
funds and e t s realized gains simply to re
- 08:29
balance the portfolio not to make investing beds all right
- 08:33
And lastly empirically there's almost no difference from manage funds
- 08:38
and index funds in actual performance that is manage funds
- 08:43
don't beat the market In fact most index funds outperformed
- 08:47
managed funds almost any way you slice and dice the
- 08:50
data So ah market alfa or market intelligence well just
- 08:55
doesn't exist anymore certainly not the way it did in
- 08:57
the nineteen sixties Anyway those were all the r rated
- 09:00
investment fee situations you just have to know about But
- 09:03
now how about some triple x Alright hey hold your 00:09:06.962 --> [endTime] horses This isn't shmoop after dark
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