Watch Out For The Buy/Sell Spread On Funds

 | Sep 15, 2017 13:32

Originally published by Cuffelinks

The management fee on a managed fund is often the focus of analysis especially in the context of low-cost investing. But, for an investor entering and exiting funds, especially in a short period of time, the spread between the buying and selling price is equally important but often ignored.

There may be significant differences between the buy and sell prices, and the impact on performance is more notable in a low return environment. The costs of transacting in the fund are taken into account when the buying and selling prices are calculated and investors wear the cost.

h3 Calculation of spreads/h3

All investing comes with a cost, as both on-market and off-market transactions have different buying and selling prices, including direct share investing. In the case of funds, the difference between the buying and selling price is called the spread, often expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value (NAV). The manager of a managed fund covers the costs of trading and other transaction costs such as government taxes, brokerage and bank fees by setting different prices for entering or exiting the fund.

A fund may set the buy or sell prices at 0.25% either side of the NAV. This gives a 0.5% price spread, a material impact if an investor enters and exits a fund in a short period.

The price spread ensures investors are treated equally so that new investors joining the fund or those existing investors leaving the fund contribute towards the transaction costs. Investors that stay invested are not subjected to the financial cost of other investors’ transactions. In fact, investors staying in a fund long term usually benefit from people coming and going, because applications and redemptions in the same period may net out but the buy/sell spread is still paid and goes into the fund.

The spreads can change without notice due to changes in transaction costs, which can include the impact of adverse market conditions or improving market conditions. Vanguard changed its spreads in 2013, with the following reason: “…reductions to buy and sell spreads across 21 wholesale and retail fund offerings reflecting changing conditions in various markets, greater liquidity in the domestic bond market, reduced volatility in global fixed income markets and improved efficiencies in trade execution”.

h3 Common transactions in a fund that attract a spread/h3

All transactions into and out of a fund attract one side of the spread, such as: