DRAWBACKS OF MUTUAL FUND
(a) No guarantee of Return – There are three issues involved:
(i) All Mutual Funds cannot be winners. There may be some who may under perform the benchmark index i.e. it may not even perform well as a novice who invests in the stocks constituting the index.
(ii) A mutual fund may perform better than the stock market but this does not necessarily lead to a gain for the investor. The market may have risen and the mutual fund scheme increased in value but the investor would have got the same increase had he invested in risk free investments than in mutual fund.
(iii) Investors may forgive if the return is not adequate. But they will not do so if the principal is eroded. Mutual Fund investment may depreciate in value.
(b) Diversification – A mutual fund helps to create a diversified portfolio. Though diversification minimises risk, it does not ensure maximizing returns. The returns that mutual funds offer are less than what an investor can achieve. For example, if a single security held by a mutual fund doubles in value, the mutual fund itself would not double in value because that security is only one small part of the fund's holdings. By holding a large number of different investments, mutual funds tend to do neither exceptionally well nor exceptionally poorly.
(c) Selection of Proper Fund – It may be easier to select the right share rather than the right fund. For stocks, one can base his selection on the parameters of economic, industry and company analysis. In case of mutual funds, past performance is the only criteria to fall back upon. But past cannot predict the future.
(d) Cost Factor – Mutual Funds carry a price tag. Fund Managers are the highest paid executives. While investing, one has to pay for entry load and when leaving he has to pay for exit load. Such costs reduce the return from mutual fund. The fees paid to the Asset Management Company is in no way related to performance.
(e) Unethical Practices – Mutual Funds may not play a fair game. Each scheme may sell some of the holdings to its sister concerns for substantive notional gains and posting NAVs in a formalized manner.
(f) Taxes – When making decisions about your money, fund managers do not consider your personal tax situations. For example when a fund manager sells a security, a capital gain tax is triggered, which affects how profitable the individual is from sale. It might have been more profitable for the individual to defer the capital gain liability.
(g) Transfer Difficulties – Complications arise with mutual funds when a managed portfolio is switched to a different financial firm. Sometimes the mutual fund positions have to be closed out before a transfer can happen. This can be a major problem for investors. Liquidating a mutual fund portfolio may increase risk, increase fees and commissions, and create capital gains taxes.
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