Valuation
The value of a mutual fund depends on the prices or values of the underlying securities and other assets held by the fund. The manager must carry out regular valuations of the fund’s property, so that the prices at Which shares or units may be bought and sold can be calculated. Regulations usually prescribe how often Valuations must be performed. In the UK, for example, the required minimum frequency is twice each month The majority of funds are valued on a daily basis, but some managers prefer a weekly valuation, and some carry out more than one each day. Read the rest of this entry »
Korea- like Japan, Korea in the late 1960s needed to mobilise domestic capital to facilitate long-term, stable financing of large-scale industrial and infrastructure projects. The securities investment industry naturally attracted special attention and the Securities Investment Trust Business Act (SITBA) was passed in 1969, to allow the setting up of contractual-type investment trusts, and the first of these, Korea Investment Corporation, was launched that year. Under SITBA, which was implemented by related Presidential Decrees and Enforcement Ordinances, the Ministry of Finance and Economy had, by 1989, authorised three investment trust companies to undertake operations nationwide and five in provincial areas to distribute investment trusts in Seoul and in their respective specified regional areas. Read the rest of this entry »
South Africa – the Collective Investment Schemes Control Act, which updated and replaced previously existing unit trust legislation,
was enacted in 2002 and in place at the start of 2003. This Act moved legislation more in line with international best practice and was the subject of negotiation between the trade association and regulatory authorities for some years. The Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act (FATS), which became law towards the end of 2002, had as its purpose the regulation of financial planners and advisers, as well as product suppliers, in the giving of advice and the conduct of their business in all areas where other industry legislation did not make specific provision. During its passage as a Bill, it had an impact in terms of how and what advisers were selling, in anticipation of the law. The Financial Intelligence Centre Act, aimed at combating rnoney-laundering activities, brought South Africa into line with international best practice and the subordinate legislation enabling effective practical implementation was in place by year-end 2002. In spite of its name, the Securities Services Act 2004 does not apply to collective investment schemes, nor to activities regulated under FATS, and the Financial Markets Advisory Board, established by the Financial Markets Control Act 1989, continues.
Mutual funds are used by private investors and by institutions for different but overlapping reasons
Private investors use mutual funds to invest money in the hope that it will:
- grow in value, or
- provide income, or
- deliver both, i.e.. capital growth and income either to serve specific financial needs, now or in the future, or simply to enhance their prospect of wealth.
Institutions, particularly life companies and pensions funds, use mutual funds as a convenient way to organise and manage some if not all of their investment portfolios, which will have objectives similar to those of the private investors who are the ultimate beneficiaries. Read the rest of this entry »
In most countries, the regulations stipulate an important safeguard, whereby a fund’s individual holdings are to be registered in the name of an independent custodian or trustee, to ensure that investment in mutual funds is safe, in the sense that the assets cannot be misappropriated by the manager or by the investment adviser. However, this does not prevent fund prices fluctuating, reflecting the value of the underlying investments, and therefore, although ownership is secure, the value of an investment in mutual funds can fall as well as rise.
As with any investment portfolio, a mutual fund can be used for all or any of the following: Read the rest of this entry »
The statistics presented earlier illustrate just how large is the number of mutual funds available. Each fund has specific investment objectives and investment policies, which determine the nature and level of risk; the greater the risk, the greater should be the potential reward. The range of funds available provides a wide spectrum, from very safe, low-risk funds investing in government securities to speculative, high-risk funds investing in new or smaller companies or emerging markets or being highly geared or utilising sophisticated techniques involving derivatives. Read the rest of this entry »
Spain – a new Mutual Fund Law, the ‘CIF Law‘ (35/2003), implemented the expansion of the UNITS Directive and effectively established hedge funds; prior to this, the principal legislation was the Lee de Institutions ones de Inversion Colectiva of 1984 and the Real Decorate de Instituciones de Inversion Collective of 1990, amended in February 2001. Supervisory responsibility is vested in the CNMV – Comision Nacional den Mercado de Valor’s, established by the Securities Market Law which was updated by Law 37/1998. Unusually, there are no institutional funds in Spain but this may change as CNMV’s circular of 3 May 2006 issued rules for hedge funds. Read the rest of this entry »