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Front-End Load
(redirected from Frontloads)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus 0.01 sec.
Front-end load
The fee applied to an investment at the time of initial purchase, e.g., on a mutual fund purchased from a broker or mutual fund company.

Front-End Load
A sales fee in a mutual fund that one pays when one buys shares in the fund. That is, when an investor buys a share in a mutual fund with a front-end loan, he/she agrees to pay a third party, usually a financial institution or broker, a certain percentage of the share's value. Unlike back-end load, the shareholder does not pay the fee upon sale, but rather upon purchase. A share in a mutual fund with a front-end load is called an A-share. See also: B-Share, C-Share, No-Load Fund, CDSC.

front-end load
See load.

Front-end load. The load, or sales charge, that you pay when you purchase shares of a mutual fund or annuity is called a front-end load. Some mutual funds identify shares purchased with a front-end load as Class A shares.

The drawback of a front-end load is that a portion of your investment pays the sales charge rather than being invested. However, the annual asset-based fees on Class A shares tend to be lower than on shares with back-end or level loads.

In addition, if you pay a front-end load, you may qualify for breakpoints, or reduced sales charges, if the assets in your account reach a certain milestone, such as $25,000.


Front-End Load

What Does Front-End Load Mean?

A commission or sales charge applied at the time of the initial purchase for an investment instrument, usually a mutual fund or insurance policy. The load is deducted from the investment amount, which reduces the actual amount invested.

Investopedia explains Front-End Load

Front-end loads are paid to investment intermediaries (financial planners, brokers, investment advisors) as sales commissions. Thus, these sales charges are not part of a mutual fund's operating expenses. It is argued that a load is a cost that investors incur for obtaining an investment intermediary's expertise in selecting appropriate funds for clients. It is a matter of record that load funds do not outperform no-load funds. Generally, the sales charge on a load mutual fund will be waived if such a fund is included as an investment option in a retirement plan such as a 401(k).

Related Terms:
Closed-End Fund
Load Fund
Mutual Fund
Net Asset ValueNAV
No-Load Fund



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