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Open-End Fund

Categories: Investing, Mutual Funds

See closed-end fund first.

Back? Okay.

An open-end fund is your typical vanilla mutual fund. It owns hundreds of securities and maybe millions of shares in 'em. Each day, the prices of those securities change and close at a given value. At that value, the fund then prices itself with a Net Asset Value (the total value of the securities prices, times the number of shares of each that the fund owns, divided by the number of shares outstanding that are owned by investors in the mutual fund). An open-end fund must buy and sell shares in the fund at each day's NAV. Since NAV isn't determined until the end of the day, an open end fund will have no transactions in its shares during a trading day.

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