Load

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

A sales charge (commission) paid when buying or selling mutual fund shares, compensating brokers and distributors. Front-end loads are deducted at purchase (maximum 8.5% per FINRA); back-end loads (CDSC) are charged at redemption and typically decline over 6-8 years. No-load funds charge no sales loads but may charge 12b-1 fees up to 0.25%.

Example

An investor buying $100,000 of Class A shares with a 5.75% front-end load pays $5,750 in sales charges, with only $94,250 actually invested. Class B shares with a 5% first-year CDSC avoid upfront charges but penalize early redemptions.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse loads (one-time sales charges) with 12b-1 fees (ongoing annual charges). Also common: thinking front-end loads are spread over time (they're not. they immediately reduce invested capital) or that "no-load" means zero fees (it means no sales charge, but 12b-1 fees up to 0.25% are permitted).

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating net investment amount after front-end load deduction from gross purchase
  • Comparing total costs between share classes with different load structures over various time horizons
  • Identifying breakpoint schedules and calculating reduced loads for larger investments
  • Determining CDSC charges based on declining schedules and holding periods
  • Understanding rights of accumulation and letters of intent to reduce sales charges
  • Distinguishing between loads (one-time) and 12b-1 fees (ongoing annual)
  • Evaluating share class suitability based on investment timeframe and anticipated holding period

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Maximum front-end load (FINRA) 8.50% of offering price Regulatory ceiling; most funds charge 3-6% in practice
Typical CDSC schedule (Class B shares) Year 1: 5%, Year 2: 4%, Year 3: 3%, Year 4: 2%, Year 5: 1%, Year 6+: 0% Declining schedule incentivizes long-term holding
"No-load" fund definition No front-end or back-end sales charges Can still charge 12b-1 fees up to 0.25% annually
Common breakpoint thresholds Often at $25K, $50K, $100K, $250K, $500K, $1M Reduced loads at higher investment amounts

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus, a 58-year-old investor planning to retire in 2 years, has $75,000 to invest in a mutual fund. He is comparing Class A shares with a 5.75% front-end load but lower ongoing fees (0.65% expense ratio) versus Class B shares with no front-end load but higher ongoing fees (1.40% expense ratio) and a 6-year CDSC schedule starting at 5%. Given his short investment timeframe, which share class would be most appropriate?

Question 2

What is the maximum front-end sales load that FINRA permits on mutual fund purchases?

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Question 3

An investor purchases $50,000 worth of mutual fund shares with a 4.75% front-end load. How much money is actually invested in fund shares after the load is deducted?

Question 4

All of the following statements about contingent deferred sales charges (CDSC) are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investor is considering a mutual fund purchase of $95,000. The fund offers the following breakpoint schedule: $50,000-$99,999 = 4.50% load; $100,000-$249,999 = 3.75% load; $250,000+ = 3.00% load. The fund also offers rights of accumulation and a letter of intent. Which of the following strategies would reduce the investor's sales charge?

1. Investing $95,000 now and taking advantage of the current breakpoint
2. Signing a 13-month letter of intent to invest $100,000 total
3. Counting the $15,000 value of existing fund holdings toward a breakpoint
4. Waiting to invest the full amount until qualifying for the $250,000 breakpoint

💡 Memory Aid

Remember "ABC Tolls": Class A = Toll BEFORE you enter (front-end load reduces what goes IN), Class B = Toll when you EXIT (CDSC reduces what comes OUT), Class C = Continuous toll road (level load every year). FINRA's speed limit: 8.5% maximum front-end load.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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