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Most Mutual Funds are a Rip-off

Mike Turner gives great stock tips
If your life’s savings is primarily tied up in mutual funds (and many investors have mutual funds as their primary investment vehicle), then I am sure you have been reading and watching the news about the mutual fund industry. Mutual fund scandals and illegal activities are almost commonplace.
It has been estimated that the illegal activities of some of the most trusted and well known mutual funds in the US, is costing individual investors over $400 million annually!
Some mutual funds actually force you to own bad stocks
You see, fund managers are incented to grow their fund. That’s one way they are financially rewarded. But this is not always a good thing for the fund investor.
Let's say a fund manager has several hundred million (or even billions of) dollars to invest. He takes the first hundred million and buys the very best stocks that match the fund’s investment profile.
If the market is going up, he may be under a mandate to be fully invested. So he drops down a tier with the second hundred million, buying the not-so-good stocks. And then he goes down another notch with the third and so on. Pretty soon he's sitting with a mixed bag of great stocks, mediocre stocks and more than a few stocks that you would not own under any circumstance. Remember, the typical fund holds positions in 400–500 stocks at a time.
This is one major reason that the average growth stock fund underperforms the S&P 500 almost every year.
Mutual funds expose you to more risk than you know
Each quarter, fund managers have to publish their performance, so they are financially incented to look good.
In its mildest from, the obsession of fund managers to look like they have owned the best stocks leads to things like "window dressing" -- where a manager buys and sells stocks near the end of a quarter, so it looks like he's owned the best stocks all along. Now mind you, that manager is not buying and selling stocks because it’s the best thing to do for your investment. He wants his fund to have the look of quality. He wants to report to the world that he only owns great performing stocks. Never mind, that he’s only owned those stocks for a few days.
At its worst, this motivation drives managers to take bigger risks than you would ever dream of taking with your own money.
With that kind of "miss"-management of your money, is it any wonder that almost 80% of all mutual funds under perform the stock market?
Some mutual funds even engage in patently illegal activities, called pumping. Here’s how it works… Right before the close of a calendar quarter, a mutual fund manager places market orders to purchase a lot more of some of the stocks he already owns. These buy orders will most likely cause those stocks' prices to go up, especially for the least liquid stocks in his portfolio. Note that these price boosts will be only temporary. But that doesn't make them any less attractive to a fund manager intent on goosing his end-of-quarter ranking. A lot fewer investors will be paying attention on the first day of the subsequent quarter when that fund's stocks' retreat from their artificial end-of-quarter heights.
Mutual fund costs are shameful
Most mutual funds have a ton of people on the payroll, including fund managers, analysts, assistants, accountants, IT professionals, etc. These people require office space, computer equipment, insurance, retirement plans and travel expenses on a world-class basis.
So, who do you think pays for all of this?? You do; the mutual fund investor. Funds sold by brokers carry loads (commissions) of 2%-5% or more. Even so-called "no-load" funds charge an annual management fee that can run an additional 1%. And how often do you think a fund manager trades those 400-500 stocks? Answer: A lot! Who pays for those high-end broker fees? Again… you do. And then, there are the administrative costs, which can run another 0.5% a year.
And that’s not all… There are the 12b-1 marketing fees that run up to 1% of total assets a year. They use this money to advertise their services to other potential investors. You are paying for all these costs, not the company who manages the fund.
TurnerTrends, the best Mutual Fund Replacement Strategy
We believe the individual investor is smart enough and capable enough to adequately manage his/her own stock investments. We also believe the self-directed decisions the individual investor makes can, with services like The TurnerTrends Report, can generate far higher returns than the vast majority of mutual funds.
We, here at TurnerTrends, believe that the primary factor that makes the price of stocks fluctuate is simple supply and demand. The higher the demand for a stock, the higher its price; and conversely, the less demand there is for a stock the lower its price.
Our technical and fundamental analysis is based on the study of the recurring or repeated phenomena appearing in the price trend of a single stock or a group of stocks as a result of the supply and demand for those stocks as they are traded (bought and sold) on the various stock exchanges around the world.
We track the entire history of price changes and daily statistics for each of the stocks in the universe of stocks which we follow. Then, after analyzing these statistics, our system calculates a statistically probable future action or trend of each stock.
When is the last time your mutual fund returned you more than 10%? How about the other side of the ROI equation? How much of your hard-earned equity did your mutual fund lose for you during the last Bear Market? Just think how much more you would be ahead today if you had started the current Bull Market with all that money your mutual fund lost for you in the previous Bear Market.
Isn’t it time to take control of your own investment strategy?
Each weekend you can receive the TurnerTrends Report in your email in-box. In this letter, we show you the results of the analysis derived from our proprietary stock trading software. It tells us which stocks to buy and what stop losses should be set for each stock in the portfolio.
We publish these results in the weekly report. We also tell you exactly which stocks we plan to buy on Monday, how many shares we plan to buy and what the stop losses should be for each of those stocks.
Then, you have the option of trading right along side of us when the market opens on Monday. You can buy or not buy those stocks. TurnerTrends subscribers who have followed our strategy have made a lot of money over the past few years.
To see a list of the stocks in our portfolio, just sign up today!.