Monday, April 19, 2010

How to compute your earnings in Mutual Funds


A lot of people invested in Mutual Funds are still at a loss regarding how their income from this investment is computed. We’ll try to simplify how it’s being done in this discussion.


Step 1: Determine how many shares you own
When you invest in mutual funds, you are actually buying “shares” of the mutual fund company.

The price you pay is the NAVPS or the Net Asset Value per Share, a figure that changes every day since it represents the market values of the investment assets the mutual fund company owns.
Let’s assume you want to invest P100,000. When you checked with the mutual fund, the NAVPS price is P1.75. The number of shares you will then get is:
P100,000 divided by P1.75 = 57,142 shares
Your total fund value that day is:
57,142 shares x P1.75 NAVPS = P99,998.50
Since you paid P100,000 but the amount of the shares you bought is only P99,998.50, the company would actually return P1.50 to you.
For simplicity purposes, we did not consider any fees or sales loads charged by the fund. Do note, though, that most funds will charge a fee either upon investment (entry fee) or when redeeming your mutual fund shares (exit fee). We’ll defer computations including fees in a succeeding article.


Step 2: Determine the current NAVPS
At any day, you can compute the value of your mutual fund investment. The only two things relevant to you are:
Number of shares you own
NAVPS price on that day
Let’s assume that at the end of 1 year, the NAVPS of your mutual fund is P2.50. Your profit is simply the difference between the current NAVPS and the NAVPS when you bought your shares. Multiply this with the number of shares you own and you’ll get the amount of your profit.
Mathematically:
Current NAVPS = P2.50
Original NAVPS = P1.75
Difference in NAVPS prices = P2.50 – P1.75 = P0.75
Number of Shares Owned = 57,142
Profit = P0.75 x 57,142 = P42,856.50 This same amount can also be computed by comparing the current total fund value and initial fund value.:
Beginning fund value = 57,142 shares x P1.75 NAVPS = P99,998.50
Current fund value = 57,142 shares x P2.50 NAVPS = P142,855.00
Difference in fund values = Profit = P42,856.50
One major point to remember, though. This profit is still “paper profit” or “unrealized income.” That’s because you have not redeemed the shares yet. Any day afterwards, the NAVPS will still change which means your fund value and profit will also change.
We’ll show this in the next example.


Step 3: Calculate actual profit at time of redemption
Let’s assume you wanted to encash and redeem your shares at the end of the 2nd year. Before we proceed, you need to know that the fund value and NAVPS price at the end of Year 1 are now irrelevant. Whatever “profit” you gained before was not realized since you did not redeem the shares.
Assume that at the end of Year 2, the NAVPS price is P2.00. As in Step 2, we can compute the profit by comparing the current and original NAVPS:
Current NAVPS = P2.00
Original NAVPS = P1.75
Difference in NAVPS prices = P2.00 – P1.75 = P0.25
Number of Shares Owned = 57,142
Profit = P0.25 x 57,142 = P14,285.50
At the end of Year 2, your total investment earned P14,285.50. If you redeemed all 57,142 shares, you can now actually earn and get P14,285.50 cash as profit.
The total money you would get from the mutual fund is this profit plus the original investment (P14,285.50 + P99,998.50), which can also be computed this way:
Current NAVPS = P2.00
Number of Shares Owned = 57,142
Total Fund Value = P2.00 x 57,142 = P114,284.00
Again, be reminded that this computation does not consider any fees charged by the fund. Your fund value will be reduced by those fees.



Top Mutual Funds in the Philippines – 1st Quarter 2010 Report



Mutual funds in the Philippines are off to a good start this year, with most funds registering a positive return during the first three months of the year 2010.
The complete list of the performance of Philippine Mutual Funds from January to March 2010 below.






YEAR-TO-DATE PERFORMANCE OF MUTUAL FUNDS IN THE PHILIPPINES as of the 1st Quarter of 2010 (January to March 2010)



EQUITY FUNDS (primarily invested in Peso equity securities)
ATR KimEng Equity Opportunity Fund – 11.29%
Philam Strategic Growth Fund – 10.02%
Philequity Fund – 7.36%
First Metro Save and Learn Equity Fund – 6.73%
Sun Life Prosperity Phil. Equity Fund – 5.57%
Philippine Stock Index Fund – 4.89%
Philequity PSE Index Fund – 4.71%
United Fund – 2.47%



BALANCED FUNDS (primarily invested in Peso debt and equity securities)
MFCP Kabuhayan Fund – 9.03%
Philam Fund, Inc. – 8.01%
GSIS Mutual Fund – 7.76%
First Metro Save and Learn Balanced Fund Inc. – 6.95%
ALFM Growth Fund – 6.63%
Sun Life Prosperity Balanced Fund – 3.64%
Optima Balanced Fund – 3.37%
FOREIGN CURRENCY-DENOMINATED BALANCED FUNDS
Sun Life Prosperity Dollar Advantage Fund – 1.18%


BOND FUNDS (primarily invested in Peso debt securities)
Sun Life Prosperity GS Fund – 1.92%
Philam Bond Fund – 1.50%
Philequity Peso Bond Fund – 1.45%
Sun Life Prosperity Bond Fund – 1.23%
ALFM Peso Bond Fund – 1.12%
First Metro Save and Learn Fixed Income Fund – 0.98%
Cocolife Fixed Income Fund – 0.69%
Prudentialife Fixed Income Fund – 0.50%
Ekklesia Mutual Fund – No data


FOREIGN CURRENCY-DENOMINATED BOND FUNDS
Philequity Dollar Income Fund – 2.05%
Philam Dollar Bond Fund – 1.89%
ALFM Euro Bond Fund – 1.81%
ALFM Dollar Bond Fund – 1.46%
Sun Life Prosperity Dollar Abundance Fund – 1.46%
AIG Global Bond Fund Phils. – (2.05%)
Grepalife Dollar Bond Fund – No data
Grepalife Fixed Income Fund Corp. – No data
MAA Privilege Dollar Fixed Income Fund – No data
MAA Privilege Euro Fixed Income Fund – No data


MONEY MARKET FUNDS (primarily invested in short-term Peso securities)
Philam Managed Income Fund – 0.43%
First Metro Save and Learn Money Market Fund, Inc. – 0.35%
Sun Life Prosperity Money Market Fund – 0.22%
ATR KimEng Money Market Fund – 0.00%



* Figures in (xxx) denote a loss. All data are from the Investment Company Association of the Philippines (http://www.icap.com.ph/).


Disclaimer: Although the rate of return is a good measure of an investment instrument’s performance, other things such as consistency of return and exposure to risks must also be assessed. Note also that past performance is not and cannot be a guarantee of future returns.


(courtesy of Pinoymoneytalk)




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