Mutual funds
A mutual fund is a company that combines, or pools, investors’ money and, generally, purchases stocks or bonds. Ideally, a fund’s size and resultant efficiency, combined with experienced management, provide advantages for investors that include diversification, professional stock and bond selection, low costs, and convenience.
In terms of legal structure, a mutual fund is a corporation that receives preferential tax treatment under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. The assets of a mutual fund consist almost entirely of the securities it holds in its portfolio. The most common type of mutual fund, called an open-end fund, allows investors to buy and sell stock in it on an ongoing basis.
Below is a sampling of our most widely used mutual funds
- AIM Funds
- Oppenheimer Funds
- State Street Research
- American Funds
- Enterprise Group of Funds
- Fidelity Distributors
- John Hancock Funds
- Kemper Funds
- Putnam Investments
- Van Kampen Funds
Not FDIC Insured • Value Will Fluctuate • May Lose Principal
