Fee-Based Investment

  

Categories: Managed Funds

There are two basic categories describing how investment managers earn their money. Unfortunately, the terms sound very similar, as if they were designed to cause confusion. The categories: fee-based and fee-only.

Fee-only managers get paid directly by you. Their compensation comes (like the name says) only from the fees they charge their clients. Fee-based investors can charge fees also, but they can earn commissions on top of that.

Fee-only managers might be more expensive to you, since the only way they earn a living is by charging you money. However, their advice comes without any conflict of interest. They don't earn a commission from selling you any particular fund, so if they suggest a fund, you can assume they really think it's the best option for you.

Fee-based managers are subsidized somewhat by the commissions they earn by pushing certain products on their clients. That might make them cheaper, at least in terms of your out-of-pocket expenses. But because they earn a commission, you have to look out for a potential conflict of interest. Their advice might come with additional baggage that you'll have to weigh when deciding whether to buy into a fund they are pushing.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a 12b1 fee?91 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop.. what is a 12b1 fee what a clever name like why don't they give

00:09

normal names to these things like fund admin expense fee or just name it Bob [Document with Bob written at the top]

00:15

but they don't so you just have to memorize what they mean anyway

00:18

mutual funds had to bear enormous communications related expenses in the

00:23

pre computer-internet everyone has an email address era delivering gobs of [Mail man arrives at house]

00:29

paperwork snail mail to its customers it was enough expense to them that well

00:34

they frankly just hated doing it and did more or less anything they could to [Man licking envelopes]

00:38

avoid having to deliver you know dead trees so along came the investment

00:43

advisors act of 1940 which basically recognized that mutual funds did in fact

00:48

have expenses that were more than bonuses to the senior partners the 12b1

00:53

fee system allowed a fairly set and standard amount of fees to be charged to

00:58

customers so that a given mutual fund could recoup the money it had to spend [Fund statement document appears]

01:03

mailing annual reports and performance data and tax information and all kinds

01:07

of other things to its customers the 12b1 system was basically a

01:11

pass through set of charges such that the customer paid for her own paperwork

01:17

incentivizing mutual funds to actually do a good job communicating with their [Woman receiving a trophy on stage]

01:21

constituency and it let the little guy mutual funds compete against the big guy

01:26

mutual funds who already had all that infrastructure of course the biggest

01:29

winner out of this entire deal yeah it was the trees especially the ones who [Tree given a first prize award]

01:33

got in early on Google

Up Next

Finance: What is carry?
2 Views

What is carry? Carry refers to the gain or loss on an asset by holding it. It can refer to the interest on a bond or the arbitrage between what a b...

Finance: What is Compensation: Advisory Fee Limits?
2 Views

What is Compensation: Advisory Fee Limits? Advisory fees are paid to financial professionals for managing client funds. In general, the market dete...

Finance: What is a redemption charge?
7 Views

A redemption charge is a charge applied when you redeem shares of a mutual fund in a deferred commission purchase structure.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)