A mutual fund that has no front-end or back-end sales charge.
mutual fund which doesn't impose a sales or redemption charge, selling and redeeming its shares at net asset value. opposite of load fund. see also pure no-load fund, load fund.
A mutual fund that does not have a sales charge (load fee).
A mutual fund in which no sales fee is charged to purchase shares.
A mutual fund in which the investor buys shares directly from the fund and no sales commissions are paid.----------[ Back
A type of mutual fund offered by an open-end investment company that does not impose a sales charge on the purchase of shares.
mutual fund which charges you only the annual expense fee and no additional commission on your investment. There are plenty of quality no-load mutual funds out there.
An investment company in which shares are sold directly to customers at net asset value, without a sales charge. (See also Load and compare Load fund.)
a mutual fund that does no charge any commissions
a mutual fund that does not charge a sales fee, commonly called a "load
a mutual fund that is sold without a sales markup
A mutual fund that does not charge a front-end load or up-front commission. However, some funds referred to as "no-load" charge a redemption fee ("back-end load") or a distribution fee ("12-b-1 fee").
Mutual fund investments that do not charge front-end (purchase) or back-end (liquidation) fees; load mutual funds do, however, involve annual management fees.
A mutual fund that sells its shares at net asset value, without the addition of a sales fee (load).
A mutual fund that does not charge an initial or a redemption fee. The term also refers to a fund selling its shares at unit trust net-asset value without the addition of sales charges.
Fund that offers shares to the investing public, at net asset value, without a commission charge in excess of 25 basis points annually.
Shares of an open-ended fund, which can be bought directly from the fund without any sales charge or brokerage. US-64 is an example of a no-load fund.
A mutual fund that requires no up-front or marketing fees to purchase shares.
A open-ended investment that imposes no front end charge on investors.
Mutual Fund offered by an open-end investment company that imposes not sales charge (load) on its shareholders. Investors buy shares in no-load funds directly from the fund companies, rather than through a broker, as is done in load funds.
A fund whose shares are bought and sold directly at the fund's NAV. Unlike a load fund, no agent or sales fee is involved, true no loads avoid deferred sales charges and 12b-1 fees.
A type of mutual fund that does not impose a sales commission or charge on investments made. Go to Top
A fund which does charge sales fee. Investors purchase shares directly from the fund rather than through an investment dealer or broker.
a mutual fund that does not charge a sales commission; shares are purchased at net asset value (NAV).
a mutual fund that charges no sales charge to its shareholders.
a mutual fund that does not charge a fee for purchase or sale of shares.
A mutual fund that charges no sales commission or load.
A commission-free mutual fund that sells its shares at net asset value, either directly to the public or through an affiliated distributor, without the addition of a sales charge.
A type of mutual fund that does not levy an initial or back-end sales charge.
a fund that does not charge any type of sales load. But not every type of shareholder fee is a "sales load," and a no-load fund may charge fees that are not sales loads. No-load funds also charge operating expenses.
A mutual fund selling its shares at net asset value (NAV) without the addition of a sales charge.
A mutual fund that you buy directly from the mutual fund company, rather than through a salesperson.
An open- or closed-end fund investment which charges no fees or commissions upon the sale or redemption of its shares.
A mutual fund that sells its shares at net asset value, without any commission.
A mutual fund that does not charge a sales commission. See Mutual Funds: Loads.
A mutual fund that does not charge a sales commission when shares are bought. See also back-end load and front-end load.
A mutual fund which can be purchased without paying a sales charge.
A mutual fund without a front-end or back-end load. No-load funds are sold directly from fund companies to shareholders, rather than through a financial advisor.
A mutual fund whose shares are sold without a sales commission and without a 12b-1 fee of more than 0.25 percent per year.
(1) A mutual fund which charges little or no commission (load charge) to the buyer of its shares. No sales organization is involved. The shares are sold directly to the public by the sponsoring firm. (2) An open-end investment company, shares of which are sold without a sales charge. There can be other distribution charges, however, such as Article 12b-1 fees. A true "no load" fund will have neither a sales charge nor a distribution fee.
A type of mutual fund that offers its shares directly to the public at their net asset value with no accompanying sales charge.
An open-end fund that does not impose a sales charge on customers who buy their shares.
mutual fund that does not impose a sales commission. Related: load fund
A mutual fund that does not charge a sales fee. Such funds may charge a 12b-1 fee to cover marketing expenses.
A mutual fund that does not charge a fee for buying or selling its shares.
A mutual fund that charges no fee for either buying or for selling its units.
A mutual fund that sells its shares without a share charge at their net asset value.
A mutual fund whose shares are sold without a commission or sales charge as the shares are distributed directly by the investment company.
A mutual fund selling its shares at net asset value without any sales charges. Operating Expense: The normal cost a mutual fund incurs in conducting business, such as the expenses associated with maintaining offices, staff, and equipment. There are also expenses related to maintaining the fund's portfolio of securities. These expenses are paid from the fund's assets before any earnings are distributed to shareholders as described in the prospectus. Performance: A measure of how well your investment is doing; yield and total return are two commonly used mutual fund performance measures.