When searching for stock mutual funds, you're going to run into all sorts of names and categories. They are usually pretty broad and sometimes misleading, but at least they give you an idea of what you are getting yourself into.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Different types of stock funds
When searching for stock mutual funds, you're going to run into all sorts of names and categories. They are usually pretty broad and sometimes misleading, but at least they give you an idea of what you are getting yourself into.
Here are some of the most common categories and sub-categories.
Value funds
Value fund managers look for stocks that they think are cheap on the basis of earnings power (which means they often have low price/earnings ratios) or the value of their underlying assets (which means they often have relatively low price/book ratios).
Large-cap value managers typically look for big battered behemoths whose shares are selling at discounted prices. Often these managers have to hang on for a long time before their picks pan out.
Small-cap value managers typically bottom fish for small companies (usually ones with market value of less than $1 billion) that have been shunned or beaten down by other investors.
Growth funds
There are many different breeds of growth funds. Some growth fund managers are content to buy shares in companies with mildly above-average revenue and earnings growth, while others, shooting for monster returns, try to catch the fastest growers before they crash.
Aggressive growth fund managers are like drag racers who keep the pedal to the metal while taking on some sizeable risk. These types of funds often lead the pack over long periods of time - as well as over short periods when the stock market is booming - but they also have some crack-ups along the way.
Growth funds also invest in shares of rapidly growing companies, but lean more toward large established names. Plus, growth managers are often willing to play it safe with cash.
As a result, growth funds won't zoom as high in bull markets as their aggressive cousins, but they hold up a bit better when the market heads south.
Consider them if you're seeking high long-term returns and can tolerate the normal ups and downs of the stock market. For most long-term investors, a growth fund should be the core holding around which the rest of their portfolio is built.
Growth-and-income, Equity-income, and Balanced funds
These three types of funds have a common goal: Providing steady long-term growth while simultaneously throwing off reliable income. They all hold some combination of dividend-paying stocks and income-producing securities, such as bonds or convertible securities (bonds or special types of stocks that pay interest but can also be converted into the company's regular shares).
Growth-and-income funds concentrate more than the other two on growth, so they generally have the lowest yields. Balanced funds strive to keep anywhere from 50 to 60 percent of their holdings in stocks and the rest in interest-paying securities such as bonds and convertibles, giving them the highest yields. In the middle is the equity-income class.
All three types tend to hold up better than growth funds when the market turns sour, but lag in a raging bull market.
All of these are for risk-averse investors and anyone seeking current income without forgoing the potential for capital growth.
Specialty and other types of funds
Rather than diversifying their holdings, sector and specialty funds concentrate their assets in a particular sector, such as technology or health care. There's nothing wrong with that approach, as long as you remember that one year's top sector could crash the following year.
They are most appropriate for investors who are interested in a particular theme - say, biotech - but want to defray some of the risk of choosing individual stocks within the sector.
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