Due to popular demand, here it is – a posting dedicated to mutual fund investing for dummies. Thanks to Alfa and Hachiko for this idea. We will definitely wait for the glorious, painful detail of your mutual fund experience!
There are a lot of definitions of mutual funds out there, but I am most fond of using the analogy of a car pool. Car pools help you get to your destination without having to worry about taking the best route – you let someone you trust take the wheel so you can focus on other things like..uhh..fighting stress!
Mutual funds can help you reach your financial goals without having to worry about the everyday ups and downs of the stock or bond markets. It is also a way of giving newbie investors a taste of what it is like to own stocks and bonds – at a much lower entry level. Imagine, for a P5,000 investment for example, you instantly have a diversified portfolio!
Compared with the mutual fund industry in other markets, though, ours is still very young and certainly a lot of things still need to happen for it to grow.
I began writing about mutual funds when, under the direction of my then-editor Sheila Samonte-Pesayco, our team published the country’s first section in a national newspaper dedicated solely to Personal Finance. That was around 1998 or 1999. A lot has changed since then, and certainly mutual funds are more popular now. In fact, judging from the discussions in this blog, it is fast becoming a hot investment instrument that offers superior earnings compared with the more traditional time deposits.
However, the industry still has a long way to go. Definitely, it is still light years away from successfully drawing the more than P1-trillion deposits of Filipinos languishing away in banks’ time deposits.
Here are some useful links that I’ve collected through the years:
The website of the Investment Company Association of the Philippines has a “Mutual Funds 101” website that you should check out.
How to choose a mutual fund
Discover mutual funds as savings tool
Investing your hard-earned money (Look beyond regular savings accounts)
Retirement plans vs mutual funds
Can I lose everything I’ve invested in mutual funds?
Useful tips:
- Every human being learns how to chew with small bites. In investing, start with the simplest concepts: read the fine print.
- Don’t depend on the agent to explain everything. Ask for the prospectus and take out a magnifying glass if you need to.
- Things to watch out for are sales loads, management fees and charges. These can have different forms and can attack a fund from many angles.
- Fees and charges depress your returns. While your mutual fund investment is not taxed as opposed to the 20 percent withholding tax on time deposits, you pay commission or sales loads sometimes in the form of entry and exit fees anywhere from 0.25 percent to three percent.
- The trick is to spot the high commissions and sales loads on those prospectuses and scrap these funds from your list. Stick with funds that offer the lowest operating expenses and commissions.
Happy investing, everyone!

September 12th, 2007 at 3:12 pm
hey! i heard na philequity daw has a new website. true ba??
i visited their website kasi yesterday. to check lang the NAV if bumaba. tapos i saw a some sort of teaser na sa sept. 17 daw magkakaroon na sila ng bagong website?
tapos kanina, iba nanaman lumabas. wala na ‘yung malaking magnifying glass. hihi!
may mga philequity investors din ba here? my investment in philequity is still in its baby stage, eh.
share naman your experiences, o.
cheers!
June 22nd, 2007 at 2:53 am
Oda is GOOD! Even I with absolutely no business experience felt intellectually upgraded. Very analytical and impressive. I want to be like you!
April 27th, 2007 at 9:05 am
Based on info from their websites, Metrobank and iBank. There may be others, those are just the ones I’ve encountered.
April 26th, 2007 at 7:15 pm
@nailbiter, which banks do you know have this capability? sa BPI kasi wala. even thru their online portal you can’t transfer funds to UITFs, you have to be there personally.
April 26th, 2007 at 12:41 pm
@dadidoo, sa MFs parang wala, though with some funds makakainvest ka naman via online banking kaya convenient kahit papano. Sa UITFs, since bank product nga, merong may automatic savings program.