Khan Academy has been with me through nearly half of my life up until now, I started watching their tutorials when I was in grade 8 and now I'm in my final year of college... and still learning and getting out new things from Khan, what a legend-- a shout out from one of your students in China
By increasing dividends paid, you increase the yield turning it into a more value driven investment. When an investment has a high dividend payout, it becomes a more attractive investment to purchase since at any time over a fixed period, a fund that pays out higher dividend will have a lower NAVPS, which basically means that more shares can be purchased as opposed to a fund manager that keeps expanding their retained earnings; that would be called a growth strategy
An open-end mutual fund behaves like a hedge fund; a close-end mutual fund behaves like a regular corporation with a limited amount of shares trading on a stock exchange.
Excellent explanation. I have been looking several videos for how MF actually works and finally understood about it. Thanks a lot. Does it mean that a Closed-End fund is the same as an ETF ?
OH, if only things were so simple. Tax incentives and eroding money have supercharged the stock market and nearly everything is over valued and most of the stocks aren't even paying dividends anymore.
Net asset value (NAV) represents a fund's per share market value. NAV is calculated by dividing the total value of all the cash and securities in a fund's portfolio, minus any liabilities, by the number of outstanding shares. This explanation of the NAV deviate from the one in the video, where the NAV is the total value of the fund? Can someone confirm this?
I think the confusion arises from the fact that it's accepted that the figure widely reported as "NAV" refers to NAV/share, which isn't affected by share redemption, as the presentation shows. Sales and other fees are just part of the overall expense ratio of the fund.
can someone explain then in a closed end fund can the company which issued the shares not get any more capital from the investors after the initial public offer???
Too bad explanation. they are the same as they show . open end fund cna give dividend also. so it is the same explanation. I think they should make a better video. I still have problems making the difference. thanks
Khan Academy has been with me through nearly half of my life up until now, I started watching their tutorials when I was in grade 8 and now I'm in my final year of college... and still learning and getting out new things from Khan, what a legend-- a shout out from one of your students in China
I started in class 4 and am about to enter college now :)
Thanks you so much, i have been trying to understand this concept all day, it was absolutely fantastic, at least to me
Agree!
Nice explanation. I read multiple online articles about etf and still got confused. This short video did a great job. Thanks.
Thank you for ending my masachistic reading over dozens of articles. This was simple quick and easy to understand
Ive watched this guys videos alot, he my be the most informitave on youtube
Dude you are the man. A textbook can't help me visualize it the way you just did.
Thank you. This was very helpful in visualising the concept.
Definitely helps with using a visual explanation....
Wow! You really did a great job at explaining this - thank you so much! Definitely sharing, subscribing and liking
Thank you very much. It was very easy to understand
Great explanation 👍
Very nicely explained! Thank you!
wow l really loved the explanation you gave here soooo helpful....thank you
By increasing dividends paid, you increase the yield turning it into a more value driven investment. When an investment has a high dividend payout, it becomes a more attractive investment to purchase since at any time over a fixed period, a fund that pays out higher dividend will have a lower NAVPS, which basically means that more shares can be purchased as opposed to a fund manager that keeps expanding their retained earnings; that would be called a growth strategy
Instablaster...
Nicely explained.Thanks .
Best video regarding this topic. Thank you brother. Love from Bangladesh.
An open-end mutual fund behaves like a hedge fund; a close-end mutual fund behaves like a regular corporation with a limited amount of shares trading on a stock exchange.
Exactly what I was thinking! This is the reason Warren Buffett shut down his hedge fund and started managing investments through Berkshire.
CEF are great for income investors and great for the portfolio managers to make better buy sell decisions not tied to the investors.
Excellent explanation. I have been looking several videos for how MF actually works and finally understood about it. Thanks a lot. Does it mean that a Closed-End fund is the same as an ETF ?
Thank you for your nice explanation
Very well explained, thank you!
Great explanation
Must be a lot nicer to manage a closed end fund than an open end fund
Excellent tutorial dude!
Heck of a an explanation. Thank you!😄
I always use mutual funds to save up for a soda. lmao khan!
lmao
Concept explained so well and in simple language.. amazing session thank you
finally this thing is clear for me. thanks!
OH, if only things were so simple. Tax incentives and eroding money have supercharged the stock market and nearly everything is over valued and most of the stocks aren't even paying dividends anymore.
Net asset value (NAV) represents a fund's per share market value. NAV is calculated by dividing the total value of all the cash and securities in a fund's portfolio, minus any liabilities, by the number of outstanding shares. This explanation of the NAV deviate from the one in the video, where the NAV is the total value of the fund? Can someone confirm this?
What is difference between a Closed and an ETF?
This has been incredibly helpful
Isn’t the NAV + sales charge basically the share price? And I thought the redemption of shares doesn’t affect the NAV… serious question
I think the confusion arises from the fact that it's accepted that the figure widely reported as "NAV" refers to NAV/share, which isn't affected by share redemption, as the presentation shows. Sales and other fees are just part of the overall expense ratio of the fund.
What are some examples that would cause a fund manger to dish out dividends?
can someone explain then in a closed end fund can the company which issued the shares not get any more capital from the investors after the initial public offer???
So, are the TYPICAL (normal/standard) mutual fund offered by your 401k or your brokerage an "open-ended fund" or something completely different?
Yes, they have exactly the fund structure on the left hand side of this presentation.
can the people in open end fund trade the shares among themselves and not with the fund manager?
This presentation is great if Ambien has stopped working for you.
Excellent!
Great 👍🏻
ty!!!!
too many shares for those capitals X)
you don't want to be "dethroned",dontcha ? X)
Thanks a lot!
it really helped . thanks!
Damn i love how u explain it thanks
Too bad explanation. they are the same as they show . open end fund cna give dividend also. so it is the same explanation. I think they should make a better video. I still have problems making the difference. thanks
thanks