Think again if you haven’t shopped around for your choice of KiwiSaver fund. The most expensive fund is over ten times more expensive than the cheapest.
Once you have figured out broadly the risk you are willing to take on and have a sense of your investment timeframe the final step is trying to figure out what you are comfortable paying for.
While every KiwiSaver fund is different from the other in some shape or form, the fact is that there are broadly common characteristics between a number of them. This allows us to group the similar funds into categories.
Some funds invest into only one type of asset (for e.g., funds that invest only in company stocks or funds that invest only in company bonds or funds that invest only in property). These may be called ‘sector’ funds. Other funds invest into a mix of different assets and are called ‘diversified’ funds (meaning, diversified across sectors). Based on the mix of different sectors, diversified funds are also typically further categorised as Conservative, Balanced, Growth etc.
You would expect then that the fees you pay for funds in a category would be within a certain range of one another. Typically the cheapest funds would be Cash funds (those that invest only in cash like securities like bank term deposits). The most expensive funds are often those that invest into growth type of assets such as global shares. Most diversified funds end up costing somewhere between these two extremes.
You also have to decide whether you believe a team of investment professionals can add value or not. Some funds, called ‘Active’ funds, are managed by investment professionals who make decisions about how to invest your money. Based on their research capabilities they are allowed to decide what to buy and when and how.
Unlike these, ‘Passive’ funds are designed to mimic the direction of a market index (like the NZX50 which represents the largest 50 companies on the NZ sharemarket). These funds lose value when the index falls, and gain value when the index is going up. There is no human intervention to decide what to buy or when. Your fortunes in a passive fund are dictated by how the market as a whole is performing. Typically, active funds charge more, given there are more resources required to manage those types of funds. Meaning, expect to pay more if you are investing in Active funds.
The fees you pay is one of the largest ‘known’ determinants of your future investment returns and so will have a very significant impact on you. This is simply because future returns are not predictable but fees are certain and are charged regardless of the fund going up or down in value. Over the years these can accumulate to significant amounts. So, choose wisely.
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