Skip navigation

YIELD OF DREAMS: How Low Can You Go? Mutual Fund Fees Come Down in 2011

For the last year, retail investors have been retreating from U.S. equity mutual funds like no other, redeeming $121 billion from these funds in the last year. But there is one bright spot in talking to clients about mutual fund investing: Fees are coming down.

According to Morningstar, the average mutual fund expense ratio was 0.75 percent in 2011, down from 0.77 percent in 2010. Domestic equity fund fees were even lower, averaging 74 basis points in 2011, from 78 basis points a year earlier.

The Investment Company Institute also released a report today on mutual fund fees, reporting similar data. The ICI said equity funds averaged 0.79 percent in expense ratios in 2011, down from 0.83 percent in 2010. Meanwhile, bond fund fees were down 2 basis points to 0.62 percent.

Often one of advisors’ biggest gripes about actively managed mutual funds has been that performance isn’t worth their high fees. If you’re not going to get alpha, might as well invest with a low-cost index fund or ETF. (Of course, that’s a good strategy. We’ve written time and time again that active management’s a zero sum game.)  

But perhaps the reports out today show that argument doesn’t hold water. Mutual fund companies seem to be adjusting the way they do business to meet the demands for low-cost investment options.  

Russel Kinnel, director of mutual fund research at Morningstar, said fees are coming down because investors are buying lower cost funds, simple as that. But there are several reasons they’re buying low—they’re aware of fees, they follow performance which is related to fees, they’re buying bond funds, and they’re buying index funds. Morningstar’s data includes index funds, but not ETFs.

To continue reading, click here.

(Read more from Staff Writer, Diana Britton on her blog, Yield of Dreams.)

Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish