What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
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- Rat Race Fast Track
5. Mutual Fund
There is nothing mutual about a mutual fund. A better term would be one-sided fund. This does not mean I do not like mutual funds. Personally, I love mutual funds because mutual funds provide me the money to invest. When I took my gold mine public via the IPO, it was a group of mutual-fund companies who purchased most of the stocks we offered. Mutual funds are designed for people who know nothing about investing and feel more comfortable having a fund manager pick their common stocks for them. The problem is that the investor puts up 100 percent of the money, takes 100 percent of the risk and receives only 20 percent of the profits (if there are profits). The mutual-fund company takes 80 percent of the investor’s money via management fees and expenses. To me, this is a one-sided fund, not a mutual fund. Making matters worse, taxes are not good on mutual funds. stock market buying shares of stock. But few investors know that there are different types of shares, and they are not fair. For example, there are common shares for the common man. The smart investors prefer to have preferred shares. Simply put, investors who own preferred shares receive preferential treatment over commoners who own common shares. Most mutual funds are filled with common shares. There is another class of shares far above preferred shares. This level can be seen on the CASHFLOW 101 game board. Most of those in the Rat Race invest in preferred and common shares. Investors at this level do not invest in shares. They invest in percentages. Rat Race Fast Track Chapter Four Unfair Advantage 131 130 I’d say there are at least four important problems with the predominant mutual fund/401(k) system that warrant an in-depth discussion with your financial advisor: First, this brand of diversification does very little, if anything, to protect an investor against a large stock-market crash, a long-term stagnant stock market, or even a rising stock market that fails to outpace inflation over long periods. When a person buys large amounts of stock in a single company (like Warren Buffett who bought millions of shares of Coca-Cola), a large concern is that the share price of the company can fall, which of course is beyond the control of the investor. By the same token, when a person is diversified across the market, it is still possible (if not likely) that the entire market will fall, which also is completely beyond the control of the investor. I think most people would agree that our world markets have become more volatile and probably more fragile than ever. From the year 2000 to 2010 we’ve observed the “decade of nothing.” Getting back to zero offers little consolation when growth—the exponential growth associated with compounding—was required to make a plan work and now retirement is staring the investor in the face. Moreover, we could easily have another decade of nothing or, even worse, a huge market slide (and there’s plenty of fundamental data to suggest the latter). If you want to add to your financial vocabulary, the next time you’re with your financial advisor, ask him to explain what “systemic risk” means. Most mutual funds and retirement plans make the dangerous assumption that the market will always go up in the long term, but there’s no guarantee that that will actually happen for this generation of investors. Second is the question of consistency. Standard & Poor’s has released data that show that if a person takes a handful of mutual funds that do perform well in a given year, they almost never are able to repeat that performance over periods of five to ten years. In other words, past performance really is not a solid indication of future results. Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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