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Featured Stocks and Mutual Funds Articles

Dealing With Market Corrections: Ten Do's And Don'ts
A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally, big or small. Theoretically, even technically I'm told, corrections adjust equity prices to their actual value or “support levels”. In reality, it's much easier than that. Prices go down ...

Mutual Funds Snare The Public In A Hidden Tax Trap!
One among many ways you lose money in non-indexed mutual funds is the tax trap. You may have to pay taxes even when your mutual fund loses money! To many people this is painfully unexpected. Here is how this counter intuitive event occurs. By law, mutual ...

Whole Life Insurance
Whole life insurance, also known as "cash-value" insurance is a basic and consistent type of permanent life insurance which remains in effect your entire life at a level premium. This life insurance is a good choice got you if you do not expect your life ...





A SAFE HARBOR FOR MUTUAL FUND PIRATES!
 
Soft dollars, a form of legal kickback, is a sly way you can get ripped off by mutual fund managers. Full service brokers give these kickbacks to non-indexed mutual funds in the form of a “rebate” to purchase research, software, and even computer equipment.

You pay for these soft dollars! In recent years, the SEC estimated that soft-dollar deals exceeded $1 billion. Typically, $1 accrues for every $1.60 of brokerage commissions paid. Congress made these kickbacks legal in 1975 when it passed the “safe harbor” law. The legislation allows fund managers to pay more in commissions than is necessary, as long as the excess comes back in the form of services or research that benefits investors.

The problem is that this has created an opaque system that can be abused. In 1998, the SEC found that some money mangers were using soft dollars to pay for salaries, office rent, and even vacations! Think about this. You sweat every day at work to make a living. You buy a mutual fund to secure your retirement. Then the person who is supposedly protecting your retirement is sipping Margaritas in Cancun discussing with his or her buddies where to buy their next mansion with your retirement dollars!

The second problem is that many funds are not taking advantage of cost saving efficiencies in their operations just so that they can keep the soft-dollar spigot open. Think about this as well. If you had enough money to not have to work you would spend a considerable amount of time looking for safe places with a good return for your money. You would not waste money on things your family did not want and hence did not need.

Why give your money then to a mutual fund managers who could care less if they waste some of your retirement dollars; its no skin off their back! The best way to avoid these losses altogether is to restrict your purchases of mutual funds to your 401(k) and try to only buy indexed mutual funds such as the Vanguard 500 (FINX).

About the Author
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Scott Brown, Ph.D., the Wallet Doctor, is a successful investor. Dr. Brown holds a Ph.D. in finance. The Wallet Doctor is sought after for investment advice and coaching. For more information visit Dr. Brown's site at www.BonanzaBase.com or sign up for his investment tips at www.WalletDoctor.com

Stocks and Mutual Funds News



8 Stocks Soaring on Big Volume
TheStreet.com
(Stockpickr) -- Professional traders running mutual funds and hedge funds don't just look at a stock's price moves; they also track big changes in volume activity. Many times when above average volume moves into equity it precedes a large spike in ...

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10 Reasons Why Buying Individual Stocks is a Risky Business
Market Playground
That means, of course, that if your stock portfolio consists of individual stocks and no mutual funds or exchange-traded funds, then you should hold at least 25 stocks. That's an unmanageable prospect for most people, because it simply would require ...

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Forbes

Mutual Funds for Beginners
msnbc.com
For the beginning investor, the notion of hand-picking your first six to 10 stocks can be a bit overwhelming. Selecting a mutual fund can serve as a convenient, cost-effective entry point into the world of investing that can be less risky than picking ...
Bearish MACD for Iconix Brand Group, Inc.Zacks.com

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Bloomberg

Facebook IPO Deepens Investor Distrust of Stocks
Bloomberg
Fund Redemptions Investors have withdrawn money from mutual funds that invest in US stocks for five straight years as of December, according to the Investment Company Institute, a Washington- based trade group. US households held about $8.1 trillion in ...
Facebook flop hurts small investors' trust in stocksReuters
Why that flat Facebook IPO isn't so bad after allCBS News

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Moneycontrol.com

A look at US mutual funds specializing in stocks from India
Washington Post
Long-term growth prospects in India are drawing the attention of mutual fund companies in the US Ten US funds specialize in Indian stocks, and half of those have been launched over the past year and a half. The number of exchange-traded funds focusing ...
India gets onto mutual fund investors' radarsHuffington Post
A look at US mutual funds specializing in IndiaSan Francisco Chronicle

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