Mutual Fund
Mutual Fund
An 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).
A growth mutual fund with $500 million in assets and 10 million shares outstanding has a NAV of $50 per share. When investors buy shares, the fund creates new shares at the next calculated NAV; when investors redeem, the fund buys back shares at NAV.
Mutual funds trade at end-of-day NAV (forward pricing); ETFs trade throughout the day at market prices. Mutual funds are open-end (continuous issuance); closed-end funds have fixed shares that trade on exchanges.
How This Is Tested
- Distinguishing between mutual funds (open-end) and closed-end funds or ETFs based on structure
- Understanding forward pricing and that all orders execute at the next calculated NAV
- Recognizing that mutual funds continuously issue and redeem shares at NAV, not market price
- Identifying the characteristics of open-end investment companies under the 1940 Act
- Calculating NAV and understanding how it differs from market price
- Understanding the role of professional management and diversification benefits
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum sales charge (front-end load) | 8.5% | FINRA limit on front-end sales charges for mutual funds |
| NAV calculation frequency | Daily (typically 4 PM ET) | Forward pricing - orders execute at next calculated NAV |
| Redemption timeframe | 7 days | Mutual funds must redeem shares within 7 days of request |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Jennifer, a working professional who values convenience, wants to invest $5,000 in a diversified equity portfolio but is concerned about making the right purchase timing. She places an order to buy shares of an S&P 500 mutual fund at 10 AM when the fund's NAV is $48.50. By market close at 4 PM, the market has risen and the fund's NAV is calculated at $49.20. At what price will Jennifer's order execute?
B is correct. Mutual funds use forward pricing, meaning all purchase and redemption orders received during the trading day execute at the next calculated NAV after the order is received. Since Jennifer placed her order before 4 PM ET market close, her order executes at the NAV calculated at 4 PM ($49.20), regardless of what the NAV was when she placed the order.
A is incorrect because mutual funds do not allow investors to "lock in" the NAV at order placement time - forward pricing prevents market timing. C is incorrect because mutual funds do not average NAV values; they use the single forward-priced NAV. D is incorrect because mutual funds do not trade at market prices throughout the day like ETFs; they only transact at the end-of-day NAV.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of forward pricing, which is a fundamental characteristic distinguishing mutual funds from exchange-traded securities. This prevents market timing and ensures all investors on the same day receive the same NAV price regardless of when during the day they placed their orders.
What is the defining structural characteristic that makes a mutual fund an "open-end" investment company?
B is correct. Open-end investment companies (mutual funds) continuously create new shares when investors buy and redeem (buy back) shares when investors sell, all at the current NAV. This "open" structure means the number of shares outstanding changes daily based on investor demand.
A is incorrect because mutual funds do NOT trade on exchanges - they transact directly with the fund company at NAV. Exchange trading describes closed-end funds and ETFs. C is incorrect because having a fixed number of shares outstanding describes closed-end funds, not open-end mutual funds. D is incorrect because the purchase method does not define the open-end structure; many mutual funds can be purchased directly from the fund company without a broker.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests the distinction between open-end and closed-end investment companies. Understanding the continuous issuance and redemption feature is critical for explaining liquidity, pricing mechanisms, and structural differences to clients considering different pooled investment vehicles.
Master Investment Vehicles Concepts
CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Mutual Fund and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.
Access Free BetaA mutual fund has total assets of $450 million, liabilities of $12 million, and 20 million shares outstanding. What is the fund's NAV per share?
A is correct. NAV per share = (Total Assets - Liabilities) / Shares Outstanding = ($450M - $12M) / 20M = $438M / 20M = $21.90 per share.
B ($22.50) incorrectly divides total assets by shares without subtracting liabilities ($450M / 20M = $22.50). C ($23.10) uses an incorrect calculation, possibly adding instead of subtracting liabilities. D ($25.00) does not reflect the correct formula and may confuse NAV with market price.
NAV calculation questions are common on the Series 65 exam. You must understand that NAV represents the true per-share value of fund assets minus liabilities, and this is the price at which all mutual fund transactions occur. Unlike closed-end funds and ETFs, mutual fund shares never trade at a premium or discount to NAV.
All of the following are characteristics of mutual funds (open-end investment companies) EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Mutual fund shares do NOT trade on exchanges or at market-determined prices. They transact directly with the fund company at NAV. Intraday exchange trading at market prices describes ETFs and closed-end funds, not mutual funds.
A is accurate: mutual funds must redeem shares at NAV upon investor request (typically within 7 days). B is accurate: the open-end structure means shares outstanding change daily as the fund issues new shares for purchases and cancels shares upon redemption. D is accurate: mutual funds use forward pricing, with all orders executing at the NAV calculated at 4 PM ET market close, regardless of when during the day the order was placed.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish mutual funds from other pooled investment vehicles like ETFs and closed-end funds. Understanding that mutual funds do NOT trade on exchanges is critical for explaining liquidity mechanisms, pricing, and structural advantages/disadvantages to clients.
An investor is considering purchasing shares of a mutual fund that invests in large-cap U.S. stocks. Which of the following statements about this investment are accurate?
1. The investor will receive professional portfolio management
2. The investment provides instant diversification across multiple securities
3. The investor can sell shares at any time and receive NAV
4. The fund's expense ratio includes management fees and may include 12b-1 fees
D is correct. All four statements are accurate characteristics of mutual fund investing.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Mutual funds employ professional portfolio managers who make investment decisions and actively manage the portfolio according to the fund's stated objectives.
Statement 2 is TRUE: Even a small investment in a mutual fund provides instant diversification because the fund pools money to invest in many different securities (typically 50-200+ holdings).
Statement 3 is TRUE: Mutual funds are open-end investment companies that must redeem shares at NAV upon investor request, typically within 7 days. This provides liquidity at a fair price (NAV), not a market-determined price.
Statement 4 is TRUE: The expense ratio includes the management fee (typically 0.50%-1.50%) and may include 12b-1 fees for marketing and distribution (up to 1.00%), plus other operating expenses. These ongoing fees reduce the fund's net returns to investors.
The Series 65 exam tests comprehensive understanding of mutual fund benefits and costs. You must be able to explain to clients the advantages of professional management and diversification while also disclosing the ongoing expense ratio that reduces returns. Understanding all four elements demonstrates mastery of mutual fund characteristics essential for suitability recommendations.
💡 Memory Aid
Mutual Fund = "OPEN for business": Open-end structure (continuous issue/redemption), Price at NEXT calculated NAV (forward pricing), Every investor gets same end-of-day price. Unlike closed-end funds or ETFs, mutual funds stay OPEN to new investors.
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster:
More in Fund Structures
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)
A pooled investment security that trades on an exchange like a stock throughout ...
Closed-End Fund
An investment company that issues a fixed number of shares through an IPO, which...
Unit Investment Trust (UIT)
An investment company that purchases a fixed portfolio of securities and holds t...
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: