I will be opening a mutual fund (not brokerage) account. Vanguard, of course, has the lowest fees, but?

what about T. Rowe Price? Fidelity has even higher fees-would they be worth it. I will only be able to invest in the Family's funds due to my husband working for a brokerage company. Which family and why. Please, educated consumers only. They all have funds I would buy and have bought.

2008-01-09T09:30:38Z

I'd like to add that with a percursory glance, it seems that the low fee Vanguard has the lowest return on like funds. Am I incorrect?

2008-01-09T10:16:45Z

Again, I will be buying 1 family's funds, no stock, no other funds. This is the rule-look up

Anonymous2008-01-09T09:05:28Z

Favorite Answer

I have most of my accounts with T. Rowe Price and like them very much - their service is excellent. Vanguard is also very good, of course. I have a couple of Vanguard funds but they are held in a brokerage account so have not dealt directly with them. Either would be fine, I'm sure.

T. Rowe Price gets very high "corporate governance" marks from Morningstar.

Andy2008-01-09T17:55:22Z

I'd agree with the first poster - just buy the S&P 500 fund and pick an international fund for diversity.

To respond to your note - I think you'd need to take a second look at what you're comparing...

Fidelity has good funds and they'd be the best choice if you were gonna buy stocks BUT if you buy mutual funds out of their family the fees are exorbinant (75$).

sdn900362008-01-09T17:02:48Z

Just buy an S & P Index fund. The fees for this will be low regardless of where you buy it.

I really like Vanguard. It started the low cost mutual fund revolution.

derobake2008-01-09T18:37:59Z

http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bestfunds/2008/actively.html

https://personal.vanguard.com/us/VanguardViewsArticlePublic?ArticleJSP=/freshness/News_and_Views/news_ALL_money_bestfunds_01082008_ALL.jsp&src=NMC&returnLink=/freshness/News_and_Views/news_ALL_money_bestfunds_01082008_ALL.jsp

nuff said.