A
auburn
Guest
1% charge
Hi Dogbert,
While you may be right, I'm not convinced. I strongly suspect that their charging structure works more like the following:
Quinn-Life tot up the total value of their fund on the close of business EACH DAY. They then calculate 1% of this total value and take it from the fund, putting it aside as PROFIT (meaning, of course, that the value of the fund available at the opening of business the following morning is reduced by the amount deducted as PROFIT the previous evening).
Once Quinn-Life siphon off their 1% EACH DAY, they then divide the reduced fund's value by the number of units in the fund and this figure becomes the new unit price (i.e. the unit price they work with when new investors want to but in, or old ones want to sell out). Mind you, I suspect that the fund's unit price quoted in the daily papers are the gross values (i.e. the price of each unit before Quinn-Life have scooped off their bit of PROFIT).
Anyway, the point is that I believe a FULL 1% is deducted from the fund's value at the close of business EACH AND EVERY WORKING DAY.
I certainly don't mean to labour the point but we have a couple of conflicting views here about charging already. Doesn't it seem absurd though to think that we are prepared to put large amounts of our hard earned cash into a fund and not really be ABSOLUTELY CLEAR in our heads as to how the fund company will charge us for their efforts in managing it?
Auburn.
Hi Dogbert,
While you may be right, I'm not convinced. I strongly suspect that their charging structure works more like the following:
Quinn-Life tot up the total value of their fund on the close of business EACH DAY. They then calculate 1% of this total value and take it from the fund, putting it aside as PROFIT (meaning, of course, that the value of the fund available at the opening of business the following morning is reduced by the amount deducted as PROFIT the previous evening).
Once Quinn-Life siphon off their 1% EACH DAY, they then divide the reduced fund's value by the number of units in the fund and this figure becomes the new unit price (i.e. the unit price they work with when new investors want to but in, or old ones want to sell out). Mind you, I suspect that the fund's unit price quoted in the daily papers are the gross values (i.e. the price of each unit before Quinn-Life have scooped off their bit of PROFIT).
Anyway, the point is that I believe a FULL 1% is deducted from the fund's value at the close of business EACH AND EVERY WORKING DAY.
I certainly don't mean to labour the point but we have a couple of conflicting views here about charging already. Doesn't it seem absurd though to think that we are prepared to put large amounts of our hard earned cash into a fund and not really be ABSOLUTELY CLEAR in our heads as to how the fund company will charge us for their efforts in managing it?
Auburn.