Beware of High Mutual Fund Expenses and 12b-1 Fees

When the average investor buys $10,000 of Class A shares in a load mutual fund, how much of that money actually gets invested in the market?

If you thought it would be $10,000, you are not even close.

The way load mutual funds operate, by the time the average investor puts down $10,000 and leaves the investment adviser’s office, only $9,450 will be invested in the market.  The other $550 gets eaten up by sales charges, which go to the selling broker-dealer and the fund distributor. In addition, another $50 typically is paid as an underwriting commission to the fund distributor.

That’s just for starters. Every year, the shareholder pays about 25 basis points (bps), or one-quarter of 1%, in 12b-1 fees, a management fee of about 90 bps, plus a $20 administrative fee to the fund distributor.

Many mutual funds are so laden with fees that the U.S. Department of Labor has identified 17 distinct fees which can be charged to shareholders. While some costs are well-known (administrative fees, for example), there are also hidden costs, such as trading expenses, which can add up to 50% to shareholders’ costs. Finance professor Burton Malkiel has estimated that over the decades as you plan your retirement, fees of just 3% can devour up to 50% of an investor’s investment returns.

The Truth About 12b-1 Mutual Fund Fees

The key thing for shareholders to remember is that the 12b-1 fees are charged annually to shareholders by the fund distributor to primary pay for the mutual fund company’s sales and marketing efforts.

The original stated goal of 12b-1 fees, which was presented to regulators in the mid-1970s, was to increase the level of shareholder communications and boost fund assets which, in turn, would lower fund expenses.  That was the idealized version.

But today, most fund companies, especially load companies, charge the 12b-1 fees to subsidize sales and marketing efforts, yet they rarely reduce shareholder expenses.

While this may seem complicated, the bottom line is that 12b-1 fees contribute to a fund’s total expense ratio. But the arithmetic of mutual funds shows that the higher the expense ratio, the lower an investor’s return.  As fund returns become more erratic, one of the few things investors can control is to choose a fund with low expenses.  Over time, this can mean significantly more money in a shareholder’s account.


Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2010/10/beware-high-mutual-fund-expenses-fees/.

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