parsi1 wrote:I am invested in vanguard Target 2020, while the total market fund has a drop of 1.2% and total international fund had a drop of less than 1%, Target 2020 had a drop of 2.72%.
Does any one know what the reason is for such a big drop?
Thanks
Convertible Securities VCVSX Balanced $12.57 –$0.55 –4.19%
LifeStrategy Income VASIX Balanced $14.20 –$0.61 –4.12% parsi1 wrote:The distribution is suppose to be dividend, dividends are not suppose to bring the net asset down. If the net asset remain the same after the distribution, what happened to the dividend
bond mutual funds can and do have year-end distributions that are separate from the December monthly dividends.
parsi1 wrote:Sorry, but where is the advantage of all these divided reinvestment that we have been hearing.
parsi1 wrote:Sorry, but where is the advantage of all these divided reinvestment that we have been hearing. The net asset stays the same before and after the dividend distribution. So you don’t have any gain due to the dividend?
parsi1 wrote:Sorry, but where is the advantage of all these divided reinvestment that we have been hearing. The net asset stays the same before and after the dividend distribution. So you don’t have any gain due to the dividend?
parsi1 wrote:Sorry, but where is the advantage of all these divided reinvestment that we have been hearing. The net asset stays the same before and after the dividend distribution. So you don’t have any gain due to the dividend?
Bacchus01 wrote:So, if you are newly investing in these funds, buying on the 28th was good? or bad?
bowlja wrote:I freaked out today when I saw a 2.78% drop when the market reflected a much smaller decline.
rob wrote:bowlja wrote:I freaked out today when I saw a 2.78% drop when the market reflected a much smaller decline.
Dividend issue aside... Have you thought about what you will do when the fund drops 20%? This stmt seems to show that your expecting more stability then what MIGHT happen.
parsi1 wrote:The distribution is suppose to be dividend, dividends are not suppose to bring the net asset down. If the net asset remain the same after the distribution, what happened to the dividend
zaboomafoozarg wrote:We need a sticky post:
"**** THE LIKELY REASON THAT YOUR FUND DROPPED X% WHERE X IS LARGE ****"
Bacchus01 wrote:So, if you are newly investing in these funds, buying on the 28th was good? or bad?
parsi1 wrote:Thanks for all the help and replies.
My understating/(or misunderstand) was that I always thought dividend is like interest on you investment. I didn't think that dividend reduced the company or mutual funds net asset so the stock should drop for the same amount. thanks for clearing that.
EternalOptimist wrote:Am still confused about word 'dividends' as I know it.
livesoft wrote:OK, replace "dividends" with the word "increase in NAV". So on December 27th, an "increase in NAV" earned over the past 12 months was paid out to folks which caused a "decrease in NAV".
You made no one-day progress, but you surely made progress over the preceding 12 months.
EternalOptimist wrote:So let's say after 10 years where there has been no share growth I sell, my monetary payback is exactly the same? So, I own more shares but haven't made any money?
EternalOptimist wrote:livesoft wrote:OK, replace "dividends" with the word "increase in NAV". So on December 27th, an "increase in NAV" earned over the past 12 months was paid out to folks which caused a "decrease in NAV".
You made no one-day progress, but you surely made progress over the preceding 12 months.
So let's say after 10 years where there has been no share growth I sell, my monetary payback is exactly the same? So, I own more shares but haven't made any money?
umfundi wrote:No, you've lost money by paying taxes on all those dividends / distributions.
Keith
pteam wrote:Dividends on stocks or stocks funds are worthless IMO. They pay you a 2% dividend for example and the fund drops 2% the same day to compensate. IMO they paid you nothing. All they did was make you pay taxes. That's why tax efficient stock funds choose a lot of stocks that do not pay dividends.
Most bond funds are different at the end of the month they give you more cash or more shares (worth cash) and the fund does not drop in price. That is a real dividend!
pteam wrote:Dividends on stocks or stocks funds are worthless IMO. They pay you a 2% dividend for example and the fund drops 2% the same day to compensate. IMO they paid you nothing. All they did was make you pay taxes.
Default User BR wrote:pteam wrote:Dividends on stocks or stocks funds are worthless IMO. They pay you a 2% dividend for example and the fund drops 2% the same day to compensate. IMO they paid you nothing. All they did was make you pay taxes.
No. The fund NAV increased over the year in proportion to the dividend payout. If you held the fund all year you end up with the original investment plus the dividend (minus any taxes). I'm not sure why people are having trouble with this.
Brian
plats wrote:Default User BR wrote:No. The fund NAV increased over the year in proportion to the dividend payout. If you held the fund all year you end up with the original investment plus the dividend (minus any taxes). I'm not sure why people are having trouble with this.
Brian
Right. The bond fund's NAV does not go up during the month, which is why it doesn't go down when the dividend is paid. And the bond fund's dividend is non-qualified so is taxed at a higher rate than the stock fund.
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