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ICCCX - ICON Consumer Discretionary S

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ICON Consumer Discretionary S (ICCCX)
Expense Ratio: 1.54%
Expected Lifetime Fees: $43,372.15


The ICON Consumer Discretionary S fund (ICCCX) is a Consumer Cyclical fund started on 07/10/1997 and has $54.00 million in assets under management. The current manager has been running ICON Consumer Discretionary S since 07/22/2011. The fund is rated by Morningstar. This fund does not charge 12b-1 fees.

MarketRiders Prefers The Following ETF

Consumer Discretionry Select Sector SPDR (XLY)
Expense Ratio: 0.19%
Expected Lifetime Fees: $6,157.84


The Consumer Discretionry Select Sector SPDR (XLY) is an Exchange Traded Fund. It is a "basket" of securities that index the Consumer Cyclical investment strategy and is an alternative to a Consumer Cyclical mutual fund. Fees are very low compared to a comparable mutual fund like ICON Consumer Discretionary S because computers automatically manage the stocks.




The Following Consumer Cyclical Funds Have Lower Fees Than ICON Consumer Discretionary S (ICCCX). Why are these metrics important?
Mutual Fund Name Ticker Symbol Turnover Assets (M) Annual Fees
Vanguard Consumer Discretionary Idx Adm VCDAX 7.0% 514 0.19%



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Why Are These Metrics Important?


Turnover
Turnover represents how much of a mutual fund's holdings are changed over the course of a year through buying and selling. Active mutual funds have an average turnover rate of about 85%, meaning that funds are turning over nearly all of their holdings every year. A high turnover means you could make lower returns because: 1) buying and selling stocks costs money through commissions and spreads and 2) the fund will distribute yearly capital gains which increases your taxes. Look for funds with turnover rates below 50%. For comparison, ETF turnover rates average around 10% or lower.

Assets
Generally, smaller funds do better than larger ones. The more assets in a mutual fund, the lower the chance that it will beat its index. Managers outperform an index by choosing stocks that are undervalued. In order to find these undervalued stocks, the manager has to know more than his competitors to develop an "edge." There are only a finite number of stocks a mutual fund manager can reasonably analyze and actively track to gain such a competitive edge. When the fund has more assets, the manager must analyze large companies because he needs to take larger positions. Large companies are more efficiently priced in the market and it becomes increasingly difficult to get an edge.