Morningstar Mutual Funds Fiduciary Grades: What Investors Need to Know

Written by Sam Subramanian


Morningstar now provides Fiduciary Grades on mutual funds. How does Morningstar determine these grades? How can mutual fund investors use these grades to better manage their portfolios? Mutual fund investors use Morningstar Rating™ as a sign post of mutual fund performance. These ratings have proved to be a valuable tool for objectively comparingrepparttar performances of different mutual funds.

In 2003, New York Attorney General, Elliott Spitzer launched actions against some mutual fund companies for allowing their privileged clients to profit from improper activities such as late trading.

Inrepparttar 112343 aftermath of these developments, investors realize that they need more thanrepparttar 112344 historical performance based Morningstar Ratings to evaluate mutual funds. The Morningstar Ratings do not get at critical intangibles. How seriously doesrepparttar 112345 mutual fund company take its fiduciary responsibility to mutual fund investors? How aligned arerepparttar 112346 interests ofrepparttar 112347 mutual fund manager andrepparttar 112348 mutual fund company with those ofrepparttar 112349 mutual fund investor?

To address this need, Morningstar has embarked on a system calledrepparttar 112350 Fiduciary Grade. Morningstar has so far graded about 635 mutual funds, including 500 ofrepparttar 112351 largest ones. Morningstar plans to provide Fiduciary Grades for a total of 2000 mutual funds over time.

The Morningstar Fiduciary Grade System Basics

The Morningstar Fiduciary Grade is based onrepparttar 112352 evaluation of five areas critical for mutual fund governance and mutual fund operations. Morningstar generally assigns to mutual funds points ranging from 0 (Very Poor) to 2 (Excellent) in increments of 0.5 for each of these five areas.

1. Regulatory Issues: Morningstar examines ifrepparttar 112353 mutual fund company has had any regulatory issues withinrepparttar 112354 past three years. If so, what corrective actions hasrepparttar 112355 mutual fund company implemented? Unlikerepparttar 112356 other four areas,repparttar 112357 minimum score here can be a minus 2.

2. Board Quality: Morningstar looks for a demonstrated track record ofrepparttar 112358 mutual fund board protectingrepparttar 112359 interests of mutual fund investors. Mutual funds get kudos if their independent directors invest inrepparttar 112360 mutual funds.

3. Manager Incentives: This score is based on Morningstar’s evaluation of mutual fund ownership and compensation structure. Mutual funds whererepparttar 112361 fund’s manager owns a meaningful stake inrepparttar 112362 fund score high onrepparttar 112363 fund ownership dimension. A compensation structure that rewardsrepparttar 112364 mutual fund manager for long-term mutual fund performance is favored.

4. Fees: Mutual funds are rewarded for having expense ratios lower than that of their peers and for effectively reducing their expense ratios with growth in their assets.

5. Corporate Culture: Morningstar looks for tangible evidence thatrepparttar 112365 mutual fund company takes its fiduciary responsibility seriously. Amongrepparttar 112366 factors Morningstar considers are softer issues like whetherrepparttar 112367 company closes mutual funds when they get too large and whetherrepparttar 112368 company starts trendy mutual funds to garner assets.

The points scored on each ofrepparttar 112369 above areas are aggregated andrepparttar 112370 Fiduciary Grade is assigned based onrepparttar 112371 total: A=9-10, B=7-8.5, C=5-6.5, D=3-4.5, F=2.5 or less.

How Investors Can Userepparttar 112372 Morningstar Fiduciary Grade

Here are some ways investors can userepparttar 112373 Morningstar Fiduciary Grade.

1. Buy and Hold Investors: Buy and hold mutual fund investors first need to examine how mutual funds held in their portfolios stack up onrepparttar 112374 two dimensions, Morningstar Rating and Fiduciary Grade.

Mutual funds that rank favorably on both dimensions may be retained and mutual funds that rank unfavorably on both dimensions may be replaced by ones that rank favorably.

For mutual funds that rank favorably in one dimension but not inrepparttar 112375 other,repparttar 112376 answer is not clear-cut. Retaining a fund with strong Morningstar Rating but lower Fiduciary Grade is a matter of personal choice. Conversely, a mutual fund’s Fiduciary Grade may be satisfactory butrepparttar 112377 Morningstar Rating may be unfavorable. This may just be a case ofrepparttar 112378 mutual fund manager going through a temporary bad patch. Investors have to weigh these factors along with tax consequences before deciding to sell a mutual fund.

Givenrepparttar 112379 number of mutual funds available, investors seeking new mutual funds to add to their portfolio should in general have no trouble in finding mutual funds with favorable Morningstar Rating as well as Fiduciary Grade.

Student Credit Cards 101: A Student's Guide to Credit

Written by Rebecca Lindsey


If you’re a college student, you probably already have a credit card. If not, you may have plans to get one or more soon. So why should you read on?

- Because financial debt is one ofrepparttar main reasons that many students end up dropping out of college.

- Because your college years can be some of your most memorable—and some of your most costly. They don’t, however, have to berepparttar 112342 beginning of an adult life strapped with debt.

- Although you may still feel in limbo between your teen years and adulthood, it’s time to take charge of your finances and manage them as an adult. The sooner you do,repparttar 112343 sooner you’ll be able to start saving and spending your own money.

For those new to credit cards and for others who know all about credit, let’s go back torepparttar 112344 basics.

Why do credit card companies court college students?

It’s obvious byrepparttar 112345 friendly representatives who offer a free t-shirt or CD just for signing up inrepparttar 112346 student center. Orrepparttar 112347 applications slipped into bookstore bags. Or mail boxes crowded with card offers. Credit card companies want college students to carry their card.

Did you ever stop to wonder why? One reason is loyalty—once a person has a card in their wallet, they are likely to keep that particular card and its upgrades for years to come. Another reason: college students are good customers.

While this may seem ironic considering that most college students are without a steady source of income, Robert Manning, Ph.D., Professor inrepparttar 112348 College of Business at Rochester Institute of Technology and author of Credit Card Nation, says this is one example of howrepparttar 112349 credit card industry has changed radically inrepparttar 112350 past decade or so. “Previously, conservative rules deemed a good customer as one that paid their bills on time,” he says. “Now, a good customer is one that can’t repay their debt.”

“Credit is no longer an earned privilege,” continues Dr. Manning. “It’s now considered a social entitlement, andrepparttar 112351 screening criteria (for card applicants) is weak.”

Banks make money by charging annual fees, late payment penalties and interest fees on unpaid credit card balances. Therefore, card holders with revolving debt (those who do not pay their balances in full each month) are desirable. NellieMae.org illustrates this point beautifully through an example of a student with a credit card balance of $7,000 at an interest rate of 18.9%. If this student faithfully makesrepparttar 112352 minimum monthly payment of 3% or $25 – whichever is higher, and does not charge anything else torepparttar 112353 account, it will take more than 16 years and $7,173 in interest fees to repayrepparttar 112354 bill!

Additionally, Manning notesrepparttar 112355 banking industry has learned that college students will draw upon various sources of income to pay their debt—including student loans, money from part-time jobs, and as a last resort, many will ask a family member to supplyrepparttar 112356 funds to get them out of debt.

How to make credit work for you, not against you

According to Nellie Mae, 81% of college freshman have at least one credit card. And for good reason. Credit cards enable online purchases—from text books to concert tickets, make it possible to rent a car, and help with medical emergencies or vehicle breakdowns. Used wisely, credit cards can be helpful throughout college, and can assist you inrepparttar 112357 development of financial management skills.

As soon as you get your first credit card or loan, you have enteredrepparttar 112358 world of credit reports and scores. A credit report is compiled by credit bureaus and contains information about your identity and credit relationships, among other things. Credit scoring is a system that lenders use to help determine your ‘credit worthiness.’ Credit scores are based upon your bill-paying history,repparttar 112359 number and type of accounts you have, late payments, collection actions, outstanding debt andrepparttar 112360 age of your accounts.

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