The Mutual Fund Prospectus

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires that mutual fund companies give each prospective investor a prospectus, which details investment objectives, management, portfolio holdings, performance, and fees for a specific fund. The prospectus lists at least these:

Statement of Additional Information (SAI)

The SAI, contained in Part B of the registration statement, details a fund's operations by providing information about:

The fund must send an SAI to any investor who requests it. Information on how to get the SAI is usually found on the back cover or last page of the prospectus.

New Format for Prospectuses: the Summary Prospectus and the Statutory Prospectus

On January 26, 2009, the SEC published a rule, effective on March 31, 2009, amending Form N-1A, Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus Delivery Option for Registered Open-End Management Investment Companies, that simplifies getting basic information from the prospectus.

It requires issuers of mutual funds to organize and simplify important investment information, such as investment objectives, risks, expenses, and past performance, to ease comparing the thousands of mutual funds available to the public. While this information was present in the current form of prospectuses, it was often placed within different places in the long, legalistic document, making it difficult to find and to interpret.

The new format requires a Summary Prospectus containing key information in a user-friendly format that will be given to every prospective investor. The Statutory Prospectus, with much more information, is provided on a website controlled by the fund, with more detailed information, and will also be available to any customer requesting it. The Statutory Prospectus will contain the key information in plain English and in a specific order, to facilitate comparing different funds. If a mutual fund sells more than 1 fund type, then it must present each fund's Summary Prospectus sequentially rather than aggregating the information in a single multiple-fund prospectus. The Statutory Prospectus is required to have both the ticker symbol for the fund, and for any separate classes to make it easier for potential investors to find additional third-party information on the funds.

The summary section of a mutual fund statutory prospectus provides information in this order:

  1. investment objectives;
  2. costs;
  3. principal investment strategies, risks, and performance;
  4. investment advisers and portfolio managers;
  5. brief purchase and sale and tax information; and
  6. financial intermediary compensation.

Any available breakpoint discounts should be in the Summary Prospectus, with links to find more information on the actual discounts.

A fund is required to disclose its portfolio turnover rate for the most recent fiscal year as a percentage of the average value of its portfolio. This numerical disclosure will be accompanied by a brief explanation of how portfolio turnover affects transaction costs, fund performance, and taxes. The Summary Prospectus should also specify where updated information can be found, especially since the Summary Prospectus is not required to be updated quarterly. The summary section should include the name of each investment adviser and sub-adviser of the fund, followed by the name, title, and length of service of the fund's portfolio managers.

Additionally, each ETF organized as an open-end investment company is required to disclose in its prospectus the number of trading days during the most recently completed calendar year and quarters since that year on which the market price of the ETF shares exceeded the fund's NAV and the number of days it was less than the fund's NAV (premium/discount information).

A Mutual Fund's Past Performance is no Indication of its Future Performance

Many studies have shown that funds performing better than the market in the past are just as likely to underperform later as they are to outperform the market. This will be particularly true for growth funds and aggressive growth funds since more uncertainty and risk are associated with such stocks, and to maintain such growth, the funds' portfolio must be more actively managed, increasing both the mistakes in selecting stocks and the fees associated with active management. This is why few funds do better than index funds over the long term. Short-term performance often comes more from luck than from investing savvy.