• Joe 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    Vanguard.com has a good website.

  • juliarajkumar 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    Risk Taking by Mutual Funds as a Response to Incentives – group of 7 »
    JA Chevalier, GD Ellison – NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES, 1995 – papers.ssrn.com
    SSRN-Risk Taking by Mutual Funds as a Response to Incentives by Judith Chevalier,
    Glenn Ellison>> <meta name=. Paper Stats: Abstract

  • tyler 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    How to Buy and Sell Shares

    You can purchase shares in some mutual funds by contacting the fund directly. Other mutual fund shares are sold mainly through brokers, banks, financial planners, or insurance agents. All mutual funds will redeem (buy back) your shares on any business day and must send you the payment within seven days.

    The easiest way to determine the value of your shares is to call the fund’s toll-free number or visit its website. The financial pages of major newspapers sometimes print the NAVs for various mutual funds. When you buy shares, you pay the current NAV per share plus any fee the fund assesses at the time of purchase, such as a purchase sales load or other type of purchase fee. When you sell your shares, the fund will pay you the NAV minus any fee the fund assesses at the time of redemption, such as a deferred (or back-end) sales load or redemption fee. A fund’s NAV goes up or down daily as its holdings change in value.

    Exchanging Shares

    A "family of funds" is a group of mutual funds that share administrative and distribution systems. Each fund in a family may have different investment objectives and follow different strategies.

    Some funds offer exchange privileges within a family of funds, allowing shareholders to transfer their holdings from one fund to another as their investment goals or tolerance for risk change. While some funds impose fees for exchanges, most funds typically do not. To learn more about a fund’s exchange policies, call the fund’s toll-free number, visit its website, or read the "shareholder information" section of the prospectus.

    Bear in mind that exchanges have tax consequences. Even if the fund doesn’t charge you for the transfer, you’ll be liable for any capital gain on the sale of your old shares — or, depending on the circumstances, eligible to take a capital loss. We’ll discuss taxes in further detail below.

  • Mocking Bird 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    I suppose u live in India,

    then u could log on to Moneycontrol.com/ valueresearchonline.com and figure out which MF u want to buy in to…then call up the local office of that MF and they will help u out!

  • Frank Castle 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    Open an account in ameritrade.com

  • winteromeo 3:59 pm on March 15, 2010

    You have ask the right question!

    Swiss Mutual Fund was set up after World War Two in 1948 by the Cheviot family of France and based their operation in Berne, Switzerland for 48 years before shifting to The Commonwealth of Dominica in 1996 due to changes in financial regulations in Europe. Offshore countries flexible financial environment, taxation scheme and regulations offer Swiss’s clients a more stable and higher returns on their investment.

    Swiss Mutual Fund is fully licensed by the Government of Dominica. The Dominican has established a comprehensive regulatory framework that includes five regulators and supervisors. The Central Bank of Dominica and the Securities Commission of Dominica ensure adherence to international standards of performance, service and confidentiality for Banks and Trust, Securities Broker Dealers, and Securities Investment.

    GLOBAL CONTACT:
    SWISS MUTUAL FUND ( 1948 ) S.A.
    280 Madison Avenue, 912-9th Floor, New York.NY10016 ,U.S.A
    P .O .Box 2342.Roseau,The Commonwealth of Dominica

    http://www.swisscash.biz/sgcha0324302