How to Avoid Funds That Might Freeze Your Assets

Third Avenue Focused Credit’s move to delay paying investors who wanted to redeem their shares shocked the investment world. Here’s how to avoid ending up in a similar predicament.

No one guarantees you’ll make a buck after you buy a mutual fund. But if you put in an order to sell, you’ll be able to get your money back within a couple of days, even if you lose a bundle because you’re selling for less than you paid.

It’s fair to say that the vast majority of mutual fund investors view that redemption process as a sacrosanct right. And under normal circumstances, the process works quite well for stock and bond funds. But in extreme cases, funds can ask the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow them to suspend redemption requests. Or they can distribute assets “in kind”—in other words, distribute a pro-rata share of the fund’s securities, rather than cash—a scenario that just played out effectively with the collapse of a prominent junk-bond fund, Third Avenue Focused Credit (symbol TFCVX).

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Kathy Kristof
Contributing Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Kristof, editor of SideHusl.com, is an award-winning financial journalist, who writes regularly for Kiplinger's Personal Finance and CBS MoneyWatch. She's the author of Investing 101, Taming the Tuition Tiger and Kathy Kristof's Complete Book of Dollars and Sense. But perhaps her biggest claim to fame is that she was once a Jeopardy question: Kathy Kristof replaced what famous personal finance columnist, who died in 1991? Answer: Sylvia Porter.