An open ended mutual fund is an investment vehicle that continuously issues and redeems shares based on investor demand. Unlike closed-end funds, there is no fixed number of shares. Investors buy and sell shares directly from the fund at the Net Asset Value (NAV), which is calculated at the end of each trading day.

This is by far the most common type of mutual fund. When most people say “mutual fund,” they’re referring to an open-ended fund.

How Open Ended Funds Work

Feature

How It Works

Share creation

New shares are created whenever investors buy in

Share redemption

Shares are cancelled when investors sell

Pricing

NAV calculated once daily at market close

Liquidity

Investors can buy or sell on any business day

Minimum investment

Typically $500-$3,000 for most retail funds

Management

Can be actively managed or passively indexed

NAV Formula:

> NAV = (Total Assets − Total Liabilities) / Total Shares Outstanding

Open Ended vs Closed Ended Mutual Funds

Feature

Open Ended

Closed Ended

Shares outstanding

Unlimited – changes with demand

Fixed at IPO

How you buy

Directly from fund at NAV

On stock exchange like a stock

How you sell

Fund redeems at NAV

Sell to another investor on exchange

Pricing

Exactly at NAV (daily)

Can trade at premium or discount to NAV

Liquidity

High – always redeemable

Depends on trading volume

Popularity

Very high

Much less common

The key distinction: in a closed-end fund, you buy and sell shares from *other investors* on an exchange, not from the fund itself. This means the price can deviate from the underlying NAV.

Types of Open Ended Mutual Funds

Fund Type

What It Invests In

Equity funds

Stocks (growth, value, large-cap, small-cap, sector)

Bond funds

Government, corporate, or municipal bonds

Balanced funds

Mix of stocks and bonds

Money market funds

Short-term, high-quality debt instruments

Index funds

Tracks a market index (S&P 500, etc.)

Target date funds

Automatically adjusts allocation as target date approaches

International funds

Stocks or bonds from non-US markets

Key Fees to Understand

Fees significantly affect long-term returns – always compare expense ratios before investing.

Fee Type

What It Is

Typical Range

Expense ratio

Annual management fee as % of assets

0.03%-1.5%+

Front-end load

Sales charge when buying shares

0%-5.75%

Back-end load (CDSC)

Sales charge when selling (declining over time)

0%-5%

12b-1 fee

Marketing/distribution fee (included in expense ratio)

0%-1%

No-load fund

No sales commissions

N/A

Index funds from Vanguard, Fidelity, and Schwab typically have expense ratios under 0.10% – far lower than actively managed funds, which average 0.5%-1.0%+.

How to Invest in an Open Ended Mutual Fund

  1. Open a brokerage account (Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, or similar)
  2. Research funds by category, performance history, expense ratio, and minimum investment
  3. Place a purchase order – funds execute at that day’s closing NAV
  4. Monitor performance relative to relevant benchmarks quarterly

The Bottom Line

Open ended mutual funds are the foundation of most retirement portfolios – accessible, liquid, and available in every asset class and style imaginable. The most important decision is choosing funds with low expense ratios, since fees compound against you over decades just as returns compound for you. For most long-term investors, low-cost index funds in the open-ended structure are the most efficient vehicle available.