Types of Mutual Funds
asset allocation funds
A fund that switches among stocks,bonds,and money-market instruments in an attempt to reduce risk while increasing return. The fund often uses computer models to determine the proper allocation of each asset.
growth and income funds
Large cap fund A mutual fund whose investment goal is to earn returns from both dividends and capital gains
balanced funds
Mutual Funds that invest in BOTH stock and bonds. 60% stocks and 40% bonds
money market funds
Mutual funds that invest in short-term, low-risk securities and allow investors to write checks against their accounts. investments include T-bills , commercial paper repurchase agreements and banker's acceptances.
index funds
Mutual funds that select stock or bond portfolios to exactly match a stock or bond index (a collection of stocks or bonds meant to capture the overall behavior of a particular category of investments) such as the Standard & Poor's 500 Index or the Russell 3000 Index
life cycle funds
Mutual funds that try to tailor their holdings to the investor's individual characteristics, such as age and risk tolerance.
dual purpose funds
a close-end fund with two sets of shareholders. investors seeking income purchase income shares and receive all the interest and dividends that the fund's portfolio earns and investors interested in capital gains purchase the gains shares and receive those gains.
Bond funds
focus on earning current income while preserving the invested capital. the biggest risk faced by bonds and bond funds is that their values can fall as interest rates rise
Tax free bond funds
invest in primarily municipal bonds
growth funds
invest in stocks of companies whose businesses are growing rapidly. generate capital gains rather than income
us government and agency security funds
investment objective is to provide current income while preserving safety of capital through investing in securities backed by the US Treasury or issued by a government agency.
income funds
stresses current income over growth; the funds objective may be accomplished by investing in the stocks of companies with long histories of dividend payments, such as utility companies, blue-chips and preferred stocks.