Portfolio turnover is used to guage the amount of trades a fund is doing. To calculate portfolio turnover, take the lesser of the buys or sells for a fund and divide that number by the average monthly assets. In most cases, a lower turnover ratio is preferred, as a higher turnover ratio could mean high trading costs.
The number of times a fund's underlying investments are sold during a specific period.
The rate of trading activity in a fund's portfolio investments. In other words, how often securities are bought and sold.
The measure of how frequently a particular fund buys or sells securities. A fund with an annual turnover rate of 100% replaces its entire portfolio throughout the course of a year, whereas, a fund with a 50% turnover rate replaces half of its holdings.
A measure of the trading activity in the fund's portfolio of investments. In other words, how often securities are bought and sold.
Relates to the frequency with which a money manager is buying and selling securities within a fund. High portfolio turnover translates into higher trading costs whereas low portfolio turnover is better because it lessens the impact of trading and tax related costs.
The percentage of the fund's assets that were sold during the most recent fiscal period.
Percentage of a mutual fund's value that is bought/sold during a year. It is said that high portfolio turnover sometimes indicates "churning" to benefit the fund organizers with extra transaction charges.
A measure of a mutual fund's trading activity that indicates how much buying and selling of securities has taken place.
A measure of the trading activity in a fund's portfolio of investments - that is, how often securities are bought and sold by the fund.
The average time from the funding of an investment until it is repaid or sold