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Investment Dictionary:

Investment Company

A corporation or trust engaged in the business of investing the pooled capital of shareholders in the financial instruments of other companies. This is most often done either through a closed-end fund or an open-end fund (also referred to as a "mutual fund"). In the U.S., most investment companies are registered with and regulated by the Securities & Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940.

Investopedia Says:

Individual investors in an investment company can achieve a high level of diversification with minimal effort and cost, since the funds from all investors in the fund are pooled together for the investment company to make investments. Investment companies make a profit by charging fees to investors wishing to buy shares in the company and by affixing a percentage claim on the company's returns.

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Firm that, for a management fee, invests the pooled funds of small investors in securities appropriate for its stated investment objectives. It offers participants more diversification, liquidity, and professional management service than would normally be available to them as individuals.

There are two basic types of traditional investment companies: (1) open-end, better known as a Mutual Fund which has a floating number of outstanding shares (hence the name open-end) and stands prepared to sell or redeem shares at their current Net Asset Value and (2) closed-end, also known as an investment trust, which, like a corporation, has a fixed number of outstanding shares that are traded like a stock, often on the New York and American Stock Exchanges. Two other varieties of investment companies, Exchange-Traded Funds (Etfs) and Unit Investment Trusts (Uits) have more recently become commonplace and are covered separately.

Open-end management companies are basically divided into two categories, based on the way they distribute their funds to customers. The first category is load funds, which are sold in the over-the-counter market by broker-dealers, who do not receive a sales commission; instead a "loading charge" is added to the net asset value at time of purchase. For many years the charge was 81⁄2%, but more recently it has been reduced to 4.5%-5%. Many load funds do not charge an upfront load, but instead impose a Back-End Load which customers must pay if they sell fund shares within a certain number of years, usually five. Funds are available as classes of shares, each having a different fee structure. The second category is no-load funds, which are bought directly from sponsoring fund companies. Such companies do not charge a loading fee, although some funds levy a redemption fee if shares are sold within a specified number of years.

Some funds, both load and no-load, are called 12b-1 Mutual Funds because they levy an annual 12b-1 charge of up to 0.75% of assets to pay for promotional and marketing expenses.

Dealers in closed-end investment companies obtain their revenue from regular brokerage commissions, just as they do in selling any individual stock.

Both open-end and closed-end investment companies charge annual management fees, typically ranging from 0.25% to 2% of the value of the assets in the fund.

Under the Investment Company Act of 1940 the registration statement and prospectus of every investment company must state its specific investment objectives. Investment companies fall into many categories, including: diversified common stock funds (with growth of capital as the principal objective); balanced funds (mixing common and preferred stocks, bonds, and cash); bond and preferred stock funds (emphasizing current income); specialized funds (by industry, groups of industries, geography, or size of company); income funds buying high-yield stocks and bonds; dual-purpose funds (a form of closed-end investment company offering a choice of income shares or capital gains shares); and money market funds which invest in money market instruments.

 
US History Encyclopedia: Investment Companies

As defined by the 1940 Investment Company Act, investment companies are publicly held corporations or trusts "in the business of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in securities." In the form of mutual (or open-end) funds, they constituted the most spectacular growth industry on Wall Street in the late twentieth century, which is all the more remarkable in light of the role that (closed-end) investment companies played in the speculative mania leading up to the October 1929 stock market crash.

Early Developments and Abuses

The first investment companies in the United States developed out of public utility holding companies and were organized to gain control of corporations. Public utility holding companies issued bonds and used the proceeds to purchase controlling shares of utility companies. In 1905, the Electric Bond and Share Company (EB&S) became the most prominent investment company of the pre– World War I period by taking the next step and issuing preferred stock in order to use the proceeds to purchase controlling shares of utilities. EB&S was organized by General Electric (GE). It purchased controlling shares of utilities because they were, or would become, major purchasers of GE equipment.

Although public utility holding companies remained a major factor in the investment company movement of the 1920s, a structural change in the source of new savings available for investment purposes ensured an increasingly prominent role for the investment companies organized by investment banks. Prior to World War I, firms like J. P. Morgan and Company and Kuhn, Loeb and Company dominated investment banking because of their access to British and German savings, respectively. But after the war, which destroyed Britain and Germany as sources of new savings, dominance shifted to investment banks like Dillon, Read and Company and Goldman, Sachs and Company because of their success in organizing investment companies that served as magnets for the savings of salaried workers and small business owners in the United States. The keys to their success were large sales forces dependent on commissions for their incomes, installment payment plans for customers, and mass advertising campaigns designed to persuade millions of Americans that, by purchasing shares of investment companies, they could gain the same diversification, liquidity, and continuous supervision of their investments enjoyed by the wealthy.

This message proved illusory insofar as the closed-end investment companies of the 1920s were concerned. Closed-end investment companies assumed no responsibility for issuing new shares or redeeming outstanding shares at their net asset value. As the speculative mania of the 1920s gathered momentum, this lack of responsibility, combined with the absence of government regulation and supervision, created an irresistible temptation for the investment banks that sponsored investment companies to make profits at the expense of the investors in them.

Such profits came from the fact that the investment companies placed deposits with and loaned money to the investment banks that sponsored them, served as depositories for the stocks they underwrote, issued shares to the investment banks' partners for a fraction of their market price, and paid underwriting fees and in some cases salaries to the investment banks' partners for sitting on the boards of directors of the investment companies.

For example, the most prominent investment company in the 1920s was the United States and Foreign Securities Company (US&FS). It was organized in 1924 by Dillon, Read and Company, which raised $25 million from the public by issuing 250,000 shares of US&FS common stock as attachments to 250,000 shares of 6 percent first preferred stock, for $100 a bundle. Dillon, Read and Company maintained control by putting $5 million into US&FS in exchange for 750,000 shares of common stock attached to 50,000 shares of 6 percent second preferred stock, for $100 a bundle. Dillon, Read partners also paid themselves a $339,000 underwriting fee and gave themselves common stock in US&FS, which traded as high as $73 per share, for about 13 cents per share.

As remarkable as these profits were, they were nothing compared with the profits Dillon, Read and Company made in 1928 by pyramiding a second investment company, the United States and International Securities Corporation (US&IS), onto US&FS. Dillon, Read raised another $50 million from the public by issuing 500,000 shares of US&IS common stock as attachments to 500,000 shares of 5 percent first preferred stock, for $100 a bundle. It maintained control—and created the pyramid—by having US&FS spend $10 million on 2 million shares of US&IS common stock that were attached to 100,000 shares of 5 percent second preferred stock, for $100 a bundle. For the time and trouble of thus leveraging its initial investment of $5 million in US&FS into control of $75 million of the public's savings, Dillon, Read partners gave themselves a $1 million underwriting fee and US&IS stock for pennies per share.

This kind of pyramiding of investment companies by investment banks accounts for the spectacular growth in the number of investment companies in the 1920s, from about 40 in 1921 to about 700 in 1929. Most of the investment companies were organized in the 1926–1929 period, with over 250 organized in 1929 alone. Indeed, nearly one-third of all new corporate financings in the months leading up to the crash were stock in investment companies.

The largest pyramid, which included four of the fourteen investment companies with total assets of more than $100 million in 1929, was started in December 1928 by Goldman, Sachs and Company, when it issued stock in the Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation (GST). GST merged with the Financial and Industrial Securities Corporation, which became a major depository for GST stock. GST then joined with the Central States Electric Corporation (CSE) to organize the Shenandoah Corporation, which organized the Blue Ridge Company as a major depository for CSE stock. CSE held controlling shares of American Cities Power and Light Company, which held controlling shares of Chain Stores, Inc., which held controlling shares of a company that was actually in business, Metropolitan Chain Stores. However, the profits of Metropolitan Chain Stores were insufficient to pay dividends on all the stock issued by the six investment companies and one public utility holding company pyramided onto it, and by 1932, GST stock, issued to about 40,000 investors for $104 a share, was trading for $1.75 a share.

The collapse of the pyramid of investment companies built by Goldman, Sachs and Company illustrates the larger trend of the investment company movement in the early 1930s, whereby the total market value of investment companies dropped from a peak of about $8 billion immediately prior to the October 1929 crash to less than $2 billion in 1932.

Reforms and New Trends

The passage of the 1933 Securities Act, the 1934 Securities Exchange Act, the 1935 Public Utility Holding Company Act, and the 1940 Investment Company Act (amended in 1970) created rules and enforcement mechanisms to prevent the practices of the investment banks in organizing investment companies in the 1920s. Most importantly, new laws required that directors of the investment companies be independent of the sponsoring investment banks, and thus free of the conflict of interests that allowed investment banks to profit at the expense of the shareholders in the investment companies they sponsor.

Nonetheless, closed-end investment companies never recovered from the October 1929 stock market crash. What has taken their place, and become the principal means by which salaried workers and small business owners save, are open-end investment companies, or mutual funds. Mutual funds continuously issue new shares and stand ready to redeem outstanding shares at their net asset value. Even in 1929 mutual funds constituted over 500 of the 700 investment companies; they were just dwarfed by the publicity, size, and seemingly easy money to be made by purchasing the shares of closed-end investment companies. At the time of the passage of the 1940 Investment Company Act, there were only sixty-eight mutual funds left, with about $400 million in assets. But after World War II, they began to grow. Gross sales of new shares in them was more than $10 billion between 1946 and 1958, by which time there were 453 investment companies (238 mutual funds) with total assets of about $17 billion. By 1960, mutual funds alone had $17 billion in total assets, and by 1970 there were 361 mutual funds with assets of $47.6 billion. Meanwhile, closed-end investment companies were marginalized, with only $4 billion in assets.

In the 1970s, money market funds became a significant new trend in the investment company movement. It was during the 1970s that the government removed the interest rate ceilings on bank deposits that had been in effect since the 1930s, starting with the ceilings on large-denomination time deposits. Money market funds were attractive to small investors because, by pooling their savings, the money market funds could obtain the higher returns on the large-denomination time deposits. By also allowing shareholders to write checks, money market funds became an attractive alternative to placing savings with commercial banks, savings and loans, credit unions, and mutual savings banks.

The first data available on money market funds is for 1974. They constituted $1.7 billion of the $35.8 billion of total assets in mutual funds. (There was a severe downturn in the market in 1974–1975.) By 1979, money market funds were up to $45.5 billion, practically catching up with all other mutual funds at $49 billion, for total mutual fund assets of $94.5 billion. In 1983 they surpassed all other mutual funds in total assets ($179.3 billion versus $113.6 billion, for a total of $292.9 billion).

In the mid-1980s another trend began in the investment company movement. Salaried workers and small business owners stopped making new investments in the stock market except through mutual funds. Whereas net purchases of equities by households outside mutual funds has been negative since the mid-1980s, their purchases of equities through mutual funds grew from $5 billion in 1984 to a peak of $218 billion in 1996, but was still a hefty $159 billion in 1999.

On account of the growth of equity funds, in 1985 mutual funds other than money market funds were once again larger than the money market funds, at $251.7 billion and $243.8 billion, respectively, for a total of $495.5 billion. In 1993, equity funds became larger in value than money market funds, at $740.7 billion and $565.3 billion, respectively. In 1999, the total assets of 7,791 mutual funds reached about $6.8 trillion. Equity and money market funds accounted for a bit more than $4 trillion and $1.6 trillion of the total, respectively.

Bibliography

Bullock, Hugh. The Story of Investment Companies. New York: Columbia University Press, 1959.

Carossa, Vincent P. Investment Banking in America: A History. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1970.

Investment Company Institute. Mutual Fund Fact Book. Washington, D.C.: Investment Company Institute, 2000.

 
Law Dictionary: Investment Company [Trust]

A company or trust formed to pool the money resources of many individual investors in a large fund offering potential for investment diversification and professional management. Such a corporation typically invests in real estate or stocks and bonds, distributing the profit therefrom to its shareholders in the form of dividends. These companies are regulated by the Investment Company Amendments Act of 1970. 15 U.S.C. §§77b, 80a-2 et seq. See Securities Acts.

In terms of organization, public investment companies are of two types: closed-end or open-end. closed-end funds establish their capitalization upon their inception and do not redeem shares. A number of closed-end funds are traded on the New York Stock Exchange. open-end funds, which are more commonly known as mutual funds, do not have a fixed capitalization; rather they continuously offer to sell or buy shares. See Henn & Alexander, The Laws of Corporations §301 (3d ed. 1983).

 
Wikipedia: investment company

An investment company is a company whose main business is holding securities of other companies purely for investment purposes. The investment company invests money on behalf of its shareholders who in turn share in the profits and losses.

In United States securities law, there are at least three types of investment companies [1]:

A fourth and lesser-known type of investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 is a Face-Amount Certificate Company.

See also

References

  1. ^ Investment Companies. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Retrieved on 2006-04-11.

 
 

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Copyrights:

Investment Dictionary. Copyright ©2000, Investopedia.com - Owned and Operated by Investopedia Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Financial & Investment Dictionary. Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms. Copyright © 2006 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
US History Encyclopedia. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Law Dictionary. Law Dictionary. Copyright © 2003 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Investment company" Read more

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