Holly Black: Each week at Morningstar we answer your questions. Here's this weeks.
I pay £50 a month into a fund and the company have emailed to say they are closing the A share class that I am invested in. I can switch to the D share class, pick a new fund or have my money back. What should I do?
So good question. Every fund has a number of different share classes, usually indicated by different letters of the alphabet A, B, C, X, Y, Z for example. So while all of these share classes offer you access to the same fund, each one will likely charge a different fee, so it matters which one you pick.
Now annoyingly there is no set formula. It's not always that A is most expensive, and Z is cheapest. And investors choosing a fund quite often get confused and just pick A because its first in the list, and it's (a typical) choice. With your fund the A share class charges 0.51% a year, which sounds pretty cheap. But the D share class you are now being offered charges 0.05% a year. So if you like the fund and want to stick with it it makes sense to move into that cheaper share class. If you keep investing that £50 a month for 20 years. You'll be a £1,000 better off in that cheaper share class if your money grows at 6% a year.
Thanks for your question. Let us know if you have any others. From Morningstar I'm Holly Black.