Series 51: Breakpoints

Taken from our Series 51 Online Guide

Breakpoints

Municipal fund securities often reward customers for investing larger amounts in a fund or a family of funds. The reward is a discount on a front-end sales charge if they reach a certain dollar amount. The dollar amount is called a breakpoint. Breakpoints are typically offered on A shares of broker-sold 529 plans or LGIPs. Brokers often allow customers to include amounts from their other accounts when figuring a breakpoint.

Example: MegaFund charges a 5% sales charge on investments under $25,000 and 4.25% on investments at or above $25,000. The breakpoint in this case would be $25,000.

FINRA offers the following sample breakpoint schedule:

Sample Breakpoint Schedule

Class A Shares (Front-End Sales Load)

Investment Amount

Sales Load

Less than $25,000

5.0%

$25,000 but less than $50,000

4.25%

$50,000 but less than $100,000

3.75%

$100,000 but less than $250,000

3.25%

$250,000 but less than $500,000

2.75%

$500,000 but less than $1 million

2.0%

$1 million or more

0.0%

As an investor continues to add money to a fund, the value of the investor’s contribution to the fund increases. If this value reaches the next breakpoint, the investor is entitled to the lower sales load on the purchase of any additional shares. This is called a right of accumulation (ROA).

In some cases, an investor knows she will be buying additional shares in the future. If an investor plans to reach a breakpoint within the next 13 mo

Since you're reading about Series 51: Breakpoints, you might also be interested in:

Solomon Exam Prep Study Materials for the Series 51
Please Enable Javascript
to view this content!