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Funds With Low Investment
Minimums
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
The problem nowadays: Virtually all financial
services companies want to do business with the high-net-worth because those
customers supposedly are more profitable.
So where does that leave the rest of us?
Unfortunately, with increasingly fewer options.
Mutual funds are one of the easiest, lowest-cost
ways to invest the family money. You get professional management and
diversification. Plus most funds are part of a group of mutual funds, offering a
wide array of investment options.
But today, families often have to save up to make
their first investment in a mutual fund. That’s because most fund groups require
at least $2,000, according to data of Morningstar Inc., Chicago.
Perhaps the biggest heartbreaker came last
November. The Vanguard Group, one of the lowest-cost no-load fund families,
reported that the minimum to invest in most of its funds is now $3,000. Even its
education savings account minimum is $2,000! That’s quite a change from the
early days of mutual funds, when only $1,000 or less typically was required.
So which mutual funds can you start investing in
if you don’t have much cash?
Vanguard did leave one fund open to us peons. You
can invest in the Vanguard Star fund for $1,000. This fund, which invests in
other Vanguard funds, keeps 60 percent in stocks and 40 percent in bonds. It has
grown at a 13.5 percent annual rate over the past three years. The fund carries
a rating of four stars out of a high of five stars by Morningstar. A five-star
Morningstar rating means a fund has the best returns with the least amount of
risk compared with similar-type funds.
Have a 401 (k) plan, pension plan, IRA or do
business through a financial adviser? If so, you might be able to start
investing with less money. But keep in mind that mutual funds sold through
financial advisers typically charge commissions. You can save loads or
commissions if you go through a no-load fund group directly through its
toll-free number.
Rather do your own investing at a lower cost?
You still can invest $50 upfront and $50 monthly
through the “Automatic Asset Builder” at the T. Rowe Price family of funds,
Baltimore. The catch: You must have the money automatically deducted from your
checking account or paycheck monthly. T. Rowe Price manages over $170 billion
and has a large number of stock and bond funds that carry four-star and
five-star Morningstar ratings. Some of T. Rowe Price’s five-star rated funds
include Capital Appreciation Fund, Mid-Cap Value Fund, Personal Strategy Growth
Fund, Personal Strategy Income Fund and Summit Municipal Income Fund.
Under normal circumstances, however, T. Rowe
Price requires $2,500 initial investment. So if you stop contributing under the
Automatic Asset Builder and if your balance is less than $500, your account
could be closed if you don’t heed the group’s notice to bring the balance to
$1,000. You also could face a $10 annual “small account fee” if you’ve stopped
automatically investing and your balance is less than $2,000.
There’s only one low-minimum no-load fund group
in which you still can invest—no strings attached, according to Morningstar. The
Nicholas Mutual Funds, Milwaukee, Wis., which manages $2 billion in assets,
requires just a $500 initial investment in certain funds. They include:
- Nicholas Fund, which invests in both large
growth as well as undervalued stocks. The fund carries a three-star out of
five-star Morningstar rating. It has grown at 15.6 percent annually over the
past three years and outperformed the S&P 500, a measure of the overall
stock market.
- Nicholas High Income Fund. This fund, which
carries only two Morningstar stars, invests in high-yield bonds issued by
companies with poor credit ratings.
Beware. Just because you find a fund minimum that
you can afford nowadays does not necessarily mean this fund is for you. You
could be better off having money automatically invested into a bank savings
account. Then invest after you save enough to meet the higher minimum balance
requirement of a more appropriate fund.
Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman are
husband-wife personal finance columnists, journalists and authors.
They are the authors of "Rags To Retirement," published by Alpha Books. Their
columns appear in newspapers throughout New England and the
Southeast, as well as online. Their commentary on mutual funds and
personal finance is carried by 200 radio stations nationwide every
Sunday over Business News Network's Charles DeRose Financial Advisor
Show. Al and Gail’s new book is "Rags
To Retirement: Stories from people who retired well on much less than you
think," published by Alpha Books.
More articles by Al and Gail can be
found here.
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