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Investment

Understanding Total Return

March 19, 2025 by admin

A mutual fund’s performance — its total return — can be either positive or negative. In other words, a fund either made or lost money for a measured time period. There are three separate elements that contribute to total return: the distribution of fund income (interest and dividends received on the fund’s investments); the distribution of capital gains; and the rise or fall in the price of fund shares. A fuller understanding of these three elements can help you make more informed decisions as an investor.

Fund Income

Bond issuers, such as corporations and the U.S. government, pay interest on the money loaned to them by the investors that buy the bonds. If you buy a government bond, for example, you know how much interest the bond will pay you over the life of the bond. Bonds are also known as “fixed-income” investments because you can anticipate your earnings.

If you own shares in a bond fund rather than an individual bond, you will share in the interest earned by the bonds in the fund. However, if you own your bond fund through an employer’s retirement plan, you do not actually receive your share of the interest income in cash. Instead, your share of the interest is reinvested in the fund and is used to buy additional shares for your account.

If you own shares in a stock fund, you may receive a distribution of dividends the fund received on its various stock holdings. Your share of the dividends paid to a stock fund you own through an employer’s retirement plan is reinvested in that fund and used to buy additional shares.

Capital Gains Distributions

When fund managers sell an investment that has increased in price, the fund will have a capital gain. Funds, of course, have losers as well as winners. When a fund sells an investment for less than it paid for it, the fund suffers a loss. Most mutual funds distribute capital gains (minus capital losses) to their shareholders at the end of the year. If you own funds through a retirement account, then the capital gains distributions are reinvested in additional fund shares.

Rise or Fall in Fund Share Prices

The market prices of stocks and bonds rarely remain static — they typically rise and fall each trading day. Thus, the share price of a fund depends on the current value of the investments it holds in its portfolio, after deduction of expenses and liabilities. As an investor, it’s important to understand that until you sell your shares in a fund, any gain or loss in their value is only a gain or loss on paper.

Total Return and Fund Performance

There are several ways to measure fund performance, and total return plays a part in each method.

  • Average annual total return: One way to measure the performance of a mutual fund is to look at its average annual total return for different periods of time. A comparison of a fund’s return to a benchmark will show how the fund has performed relative to an index.
  • Cumulative total return: Looking at a fund’s cumulative total return shows how much a fund has earned over a specific period.
  • Year-by-year returns: It can be helpful to compare a fund’s performance from one year to the next. If you notice a wide variation year to year, the fund is most likely a highly volatile one.

You should consider the fund’s investment objectives, charges, expenses, and risks carefully before you invest. The fund’s prospectus, which can be obtained from your financial representative, contains this and other information about the fund. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money. Shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost.

Prices of fixed income securities may fluctuate due to interest rate changes. Investors may lose money if bonds are sold before maturity.

Stock investing involves a high degree of risk. Stock prices fluctuate and investors may lose money.

Filed Under: Investment

Diversification: A Tool to Temper Risk

August 9, 2024 by admin

Market volatility is a given in the investment world, so employing strategies to cope with fluctuating market values should be a priority. Diversification — spreading your money among many different investments and investment types — is one such strategy.1 Although you can’t eliminate volatility, diversifying your investment portfolio may help you manage it.

A First Step: Asset Allocation

Different asset classes often respond differently to similar market conditions, so investing in a mix of stock, fixed-income, and cash investments is the first step in creating a diversified portfolio. Investing across all three of the major asset classes — a strategy known as asset allocation — reduces the possibility that a decline in any single investment or asset type would put your entire portfolio in jeopardy.2 For example, including fixed-income and cash investments in your stock portfolio may help moderate losses if the stock market suffers a decline.

Taking It to Another Level

In addition to allocating your investments among stocks, bonds, and cash, you may want to diversify within each investment type. For instance, holding a variety of small-, mid-, and large-cap stocks and investment-grade bonds with varying maturity dates may help reduce your risk of loss. Similarly, you may want to consider investing in a variety of stocks from different market sectors.3 A market sector is a segment of the economy that includes companies or industries offering the same or similar products or services. Investing across several market sectors may help control risk and provide greater portfolio diversification than investing in only one or two industries.

Cyclical Versus Defensive

Some industries are notably affected by economic highs and lows. Cyclical stocks come from industries such as housing, transportation, and technology, that typically are sensitive to the health of the economy. Consumer demand for their products and services tends to rise when the economy is flourishing and decline when the economy experiences a downturn. Defensive stocks come from industries such as utilities, food, and other staples where demand tends to be relatively steady. Investing in both cyclical and defensive stocks from different industries may further improve your portfolio’s diversification.

Traveling Abroad

You can provide another layer of diversification and add exposure to new markets by including investments from different countries and regions of the world in your portfolio.4 International markets may respond differently to various economic conditions than U.S. markets do. Investing overseas may help cushion your portfolio when U.S. markets are underperforming.

Not a One-Time Undertaking

Periodically checking your portfolio for changes to your investment mix can help you maintain your desired asset allocation and level of diversification. If market conditions have altered your asset mix, the risk level in your portfolio may have shifted, and your investments may need to be rebalanced to return to your original asset mix and risk level.

In the Long Run

Your portfolio’s asset mix can help prepare you for the uncertainties of market performance. So it is important to select investments carefully and invest with a long-term perspective.

Filed Under: Investment

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