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Ask MAX: Did My Fund Fall 41% In One Day?

Bobbie asks:

Can you please tell me what happened to the Fidelity Advisor Korea A (FAKAX) fund? It dropped 41% in one day. I have been holding this for many years and didn’t hear anything negative news that would have caused this."

On December 5th Fidelity Advisor Korea fund (FAKAX) paid out $3.06 worth of short term capital gains (taxed as income if you own the fund in a taxable account) and a whopping $13.03 of long term capital gains – a total of $16.09 or 42% of the fund price. These payouts are tax events – not actual drops like you see when fund investments fall.

Depending on what box you checked when you invested, you’ll either get a dividend check in the mail in the amount of 42% of your investment in the fund, or (more likely) the 42% dividend was reinvested for you into more shares of the fund. Either way you didn’t actually lose 42% of your money overnight. In fact the fund was actually up slightly on December 5th, adjusting for the distribution.

The bad news is if you own this fund in a taxable account (outside of an IRA or 401K), you’re on the hook for the taxes due on this amount come April 15th...

Taxing Times

Each December we review our own portfolio holdings for estimated year-end capital gains distributions (right around when most fund companies start publishing estimates). This information can be useful because investors may want to avoid buying a fund until after a big distribution, or in some rarer cases consider selling a fund before a big distribution.

Can Money Market Funds Fail?

Got money? Then there's a good chance some of it's in money market funds. Investors now own over $3 trillion in these buck-per-share mutual funds that offer the liquidity of cash, the yield of Treasury bills, and the safety of …. well, that’s the part that's now in question.

Money market funds have only been around for about three decades, making them the young'ns of a mutual fund business that's existed in one form or another since before the Great Depression. Whenever we suffer a credit crisis of some sort, the same question comes up – are money market funds safe?

The number of articles written about the money fund industry's current troubles has been climbing in lockstep with the number of financial institutions taking multi-billion dollar write-offs related to mortgage “investments” (and we use the term loosely).

In last week’s Wall Street Journal, for example:

The risk to money-market funds is that a decline in the value of a single investment can cause them to "break the buck," or allow their net asset value to fall below the $1 level the funds are required to maintain.

FAF Advisors [a unit of U.S. Bancorp] is the latest in a string of about a half-dozen financial institutions that have taken steps to protect their money-market funds. The others include Bank of America Corp.'s Columbia Management Group, Credit Suisse Group's Credit Suisse Asset Management and Wachovia Corp.'s Evergreen Investments. No money-market fund has broken the buck in the recent turmoil.”

Like a top-40 radio station, the (mortgage) hits just keep on coming. This latest evolution of the mortgage disaster is now placing even the safest category of mutual funds in jeopardy. But just how risky are these funds?...

Seventh Annual MAXfunds Turkey Awards

It's Not an Honor Just to be Nominated.

Gobble gobble. It’s that time of year again: Time for MAXfunds to nominate funds for our seventh annual fund turkey awards. With over 25,000 funds (counting all share classes and ETFs) out there, there are plenty of Butterballs to go around this Thanksgiving...

october 2007 performance review

The market started the month of October by continuing the comeback from the August lows, but by the second week the strength had begun to fizzle. The real trouble (call it mortgage woes v2) didn’t strike until November 1st so for the month of October the Dow eked out a modest 0.38% return. The S&P 500 fared a little better with a 1.58% return, beaten by a big move – which is looking a lot like a last gasp – by small caps stocks, moving up 4.5% for the month. But all indexes pale in comparison to the Nasdaq as investors continue to rediscover the magic of tech and growth stocks – or at least want to get as far away from bank stocks as they possibly can. The Nasdaq 100 index rocketed by just over 7% for the month, while the Nasdaq as a whole gained 5.84%.