Fund Structures
Investment company types: mutual funds, ETFs, closed-end funds, and NAV mechanics
Why This Matters on the Series 65
This cluster covers fund structures concepts tested on the Series 65 exam. Understanding how these terms relate helps you answer scenario-based questions that test conceptual connections.
Terms in This Cluster (6)
American Depositary Receipt (ADR)
highA negotiable security representing shares of a foreign company held by a U.S. depositary bank. ADRs trade on U.S. exchanges in U.S. dollars, making foreign stocks accessible to American investors without needing international brokerage accounts. Despite trading in dollars, ADRs retain currency risk because dividends are declared in the foreign currency before conversion to USD.
Example: An investor purchases 100 ADRs of a Japanese automaker trading on the NYSE at $45 per share (denomin...
Closed-End Fund
highAn investment company that issues a fixed number of shares through an IPO, which then trade on exchanges at market prices that can differ from NAV. Does not continuously issue or redeem shares, and may use leverage to enhance returns.
Example: A closed-end municipal bond fund has a NAV of $10.00 per share but trades on the NYSE at $9.50, repr...
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)
highA pooled investment security that trades on an exchange like a stock throughout the trading day. ETFs typically track an index, sector, commodity, or other assets, combining the diversification of mutual funds with the intraday tradability of stocks. They use a creation/redemption mechanism with authorized participants to maintain prices close to net asset value (NAV).
Example: An investor purchases 100 shares of an S&P 500 ETF (like SPY) at 10:30 AM for $450 per share through...
Mutual Fund
highAn open-end investment company that pools money from many investors to purchase a diversified portfolio of securities, with shares continuously issued and redeemed at NAV. Regulated under the Investment Company Act of 1940 with forward pricing (end-of-day NAV).
Example: A growth mutual fund with $500 million in assets and 10 million shares outstanding has a NAV of $50 ...
Net Asset Value (NAV)
highThe per-share value of a fund calculated by dividing total assets minus liabilities by shares outstanding. Mutual funds calculate NAV once daily at 4:00 PM ET (market close) and transact at forward pricing. Public offering price (POP) equals NAV plus sales load for load funds.
Example: A mutual fund with $500M in assets, $10M in liabilities, and 25M shares outstanding has a NAV of $19...
Unit Investment Trust (UIT)
highAn investment company that purchases a fixed portfolio of securities and holds them unchanged until termination. Registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 with a defined termination date, redeemable units (not shares), no active management after creation, and no board of directors.
Example: A UIT purchases a fixed portfolio of 30 dividend-paying stocks worth $50 million with a 5-year termi...
Study Tips for Fund Structures
Connect the Concepts
Don't memorize these terms in isolation. Understanding how they relate helps you tackle scenario-based exam questions.
Focus on High-Priority Terms
Start with terms marked "high" relevance. These appear most frequently on the exam and form the foundation for understanding related concepts.
Use Real Examples
Each term includes exam-relevant examples. Practice applying concepts to scenarios rather than just memorizing definitions.