11:13 Jan 24, 2000 |
English to French translations [PRO] Bus/Financial | |||||||
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| Selected response from: Evelyna Radoslavova Canada Local time: 22:04 | ||||||
Grading comment
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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na | droits de garde |
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droits de garde Explanation: Définition donnée par Bourse 2000: frais prélevés annuellement par l'intermédiaire financier pour la conservation et le suivi des valeurs mobilières détenues en portefeuille. Explication donnée par Medscape: When you buy a fund through a broker, you can expect that 0.25 percent of your fund's value will be taken out each year to pay the broker. This may be known as a 12b-1 fee to pay "distribution and marketing" charges, but it is really a trailing commission to the broker who sold you the fund. For this ongoing fee, your broker is supposed to monitor your investment in the fund... Trailing fees are imposed on the current value, not the original investment. And from an Australian fund: Some Fund Managers will pay us a small trailing commission for as long as your funds remain invested. This trailing commission is paid from the Fund Manager's normal fees and charges and it does not involve you in any additional outlay. Finalement, sur le site ci-dessous, vous trouverez quelques paragraphes de la Ontario Securities Commission traitant des règles régissant les "trailing commissions" Hope it helps. Bonne chance, Reference: http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/Regulation/Rulemaking/Rules/81-1... Reference: http://www.bourse-2000.com/ |
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