I don't get the highlighted.. typos, etc..
I have a foggy notion what mutual funds are... but
you have to write as though you were writing "Finances for Dummies"
I didn't have anyone like Hellary Clinton around as a child/young adult... to teach me how to game the system... or whatever u call it.. so now I am an ignorant maroon...
but at least I know how to vote...
and stuff like that
_
A mutual fund is a bunch of stock and bond shares, held by an investment house (institution), and sold as a block, usually balanced by finical analysts who choose what is both appealing and somewhat balanced.
For example, say you by stock in a car company, or energy company, then with oil sold at lower rates, you lose your investment in energy. Now with a mutual fund, you have many stocks, some with unrelated stocks, so some drop as oil drops and some rise, such as food companies. The reason investors by these funds is there is less risk
Mutual funds may be stock heavy, or bond heavy, or balanced. Often, when stock values drop, bonds rise. Now we have less bond value increase because the Fed keeps stating the interest is to raise. Bond always pay the interest rate, even when the bond value decreases. The other issue with bonds, they can be paid out, so, if you have a bond, it will always have the purchase value, yet it might be sold, your money returned and your receive no more interest.
People who invest, yet do not have much experience will invest more in bonds than stocks.
I think this is enough for you to digest now.