What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
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- Andy Tanner explains pros and cons of mutual funds
Tom Wheelwright explains:
When you buy mutual funds, you are taxed in two separate ways. First, you are taxed on the capital gains when the fund trades (buys and sells) a stock. Second, you are taxed when you trade the mutual fund itself. The outcome of this taxing scheme is that you can pay capital gains on the mutual fund’s stock trades in a year when the mutual fund goes down in value. Imagine paying taxes when you lose money. That’s exactly what happens to a lot of people when they own mutual funds. There are some advantages to mutual funds. Rather than have me discuss the pros and cons of mutual funds, I will let the Rich Dad advisor, Andy Tanner, explain paper assets. Andy Tanner explains pros and cons of mutual funds: When it comes to the pros and cons of mutual funds, I’d say that most of the pros lie in favor of the institutions that sell the mutual funds, along with the fund managers who collect fees from the fund’s investors. The investors put up the money, investors assume the risk, and institutions and fund managers get paid whether the fund performs well or whether it doesn’t. Combine that with a program of consistent dollar-cost averaging, and you have a constant flow of dollars coming into the fund at all times. As Robert says, there are always two sides to every coin, and there’s no question that the mutual-fund companies are on the more profitable side. I suppose the appeal of mutual funds, unit trusts, and retirement plans like 401(k)s and RRSPs is that, on the surface, they appear to give an investor a way to invest without having to have a lot of financial education. In addition, they also give the investor a sense of safety because they usually diversify the money across several different sectors. The problem is simply that appearances can be deceiving. I’m not convinced at all that investing in a 401(k) filled with mutual funds is an alternative to financial education. The type of diversification that mutual funds carry gives rise to what I think is a very dangerous false sense of safety. In reality, they give an investor no more control than investing in a single stock. Risk is related to control. Less control means more risk, which is why hope is not a strategy. |
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