TL;DR
- The biggest number on a fund fact sheet is often the least useful place to start. Begin with the fund’s role, benchmark, holdings, and costs.
- Use the RESET Scorecard in this article: Role, Exposure, Standardized returns, Expenses and frictions, Team and terms.
- Treat 1-year return, yield, and assets under management as clues, not conclusions.
- For bond funds, compare like with like on yield. A 30-day SEC yield is usually more comparable than a loosely labeled distribution rate.
- If the fact sheet still looks good after you check the prospectus, shareholder report, turnover, and share class, then it deserves deeper consideration.
A fact sheet for an investment fund is designed to show the value of purchasing an investment fund, and typically start out showing the largest positive number, such as; recent returns, yield, star rating or fund size. While all of these numbers are significant, it is the order in which they appear that can cause problems. If your decision to purchase a fund is based upon the numbers provided on the summary sheet, without first understanding what is being offered by that fund, you may end up with a concentrated growth fund as a core holding, a high turnover bond fund purchased in a taxable account, or an expensive share class of an acceptable strategy that is available at less expensive prices through other means.
Consider the fact sheet a screening document vs the last document in the decision-maker’s process. The prospectus is an objective standardized disclosure, outlining fees and risks and performance; the shareholder report provides additional information such as turnover and the benchmark comparison and how much you pay for an expense. A good fact sheet can help you narrow your options; however, you shouldn’t be basing your final decision off the fact sheet.

Use the RESET Scorecard before you read the performance box
I like to use RESET Scorecard for my filter. I give rating quality by giving each line 0-2 points, with funds that receive a total score between 8 and 10 representing a great amount of research; scores between 5 and 7 require access to the prospectus before moving forward; and less than 5 typically means no action at this time. The key is not precision but rather to force you to direct your attention toward something else than the largest numerical value presented by the marketing department.
| Lens | What to read | 2 points | 1 point | 0 points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Role | Objective, category, benchmark | You can explain the fund’s job in one sentence and it fits your portfolio. | The job is somewhat clear, but overlap with what you already own is uncertain. | You cannot tell whether it is a core holding, satellite, income fund, hedge, or theme. |
| Exposure | Holdings, sectors, countries, duration, credit quality, concentration | The portfolio clearly matches the stated job. | The portfolio mostly fits but includes bets you do not fully understand. | The sheet hides or downplays meaningful concentration or risk. |
| Standardized returns | 5-year, 10-year, since inception, benchmark | Longer-term results and benchmark make sense for the strategy. | The track record is short or the comparison is incomplete. | The fact sheet leans on a hot recent period or an odd benchmark. |
| Expenses and frictions | Expense ratio, loads, 12b-1 fees, spread, turnover | Costs are low or clearly justified, and you can see the likely frictions. | Costs are acceptable but not easy to compare. | Costs are high, layered, or partly hidden. |
| Team and terms | Share class, ticker, manager tenure, index rules, yield label | You know exactly what share class and rule set you are buying. | One detail is still fuzzy. | The share class, yield definition, or strategy rules are unclear. |
Which marketing numbers deserve a pause
| Metric on the fact sheet | Why it distracts | What to check next | When it is genuinely useful |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-year return | It can be driven by one style tailwind or one strong stretch. | Compare 5-year and 10-year annualized returns against an appropriate benchmark. | It helps only after you know the fund’s role and longer record. |
| Yield | Different funds use different yield labels and dates. | Confirm whether you are looking at SEC yield, 12-month yield, or a distribution figure, then check duration and credit quality. | It matters for income funds when you compare the same yield definition across funds. |
| Expense ratio | Low cost is good, but it is not always the whole cost story. | Look for loads, 12b-1 fees, ETF bid-ask spread, premium or discount, and turnover. | It is a strong first filter among funds doing the same job. |
| Assets under management | Big can look safe and small can look nimble, but size alone proves little. | Ask whether ETF trading is thin, whether the strategy is capacity-constrained, or whether closure risk matters. | It matters most at the extremes, not as a tie-breaker among normal-sized funds. |
| Top holdings | Familiar company names can feel safer than they are. | Check top-10 concentration, sector weights, and total number of holdings. | It is useful for spotting unintended concentration. |
| Star rating or peer ranking | Backward-looking rankings often get treated like forward-looking forecasts. | Ask what category the fund is being ranked against and over what period. | Use it as background only, never as the main reason to buy. |
A clean reading order for any fact sheet
- Whoever you use for your investing, ensure that they have listed the correct stock class (ETF) and the date (the most recent date available). A high return from one class of stock does not benefit you at all if you can only purchase a higher-priced class. Stock ownership details may not have changed for a long time.
- Read the objective and benchmark before anything else. If the benchmark is Russell 1000 Growth, Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond, or a custom blend, that tells you what game the fund is trying to play.
- Analyze the actual holdings in the fund. For stock funds look at market capitalization, sector mix, geographic breakdown, first 10 holdings, and number of different companies represented in the portfolio. For bond funds review the average duration of the bonds, time until maturity of the bonds owned, sector mix, and creditworthiness of the bonds.
- Read performance from longest to shortest period. Start with the 10-year or since-inception number, then 5-year, then 1-year. You want to know whether the fund held up across more than one market environment.
- Find the total cost. Expense ratios are typically the initial point, but not necessarily the final point. Mutual funds may include loads or 12b-1 fees. With ETFs, one needs to consider the trading spread and potential premium or discount risk. Higher turnover means more friction and more potential tax implications in a taxable account.
- Identify the individuals or organizations that will execute the investment strategy. In the case of actively managed funds, verify the current manager’s historical relationship with the fund and the period of time that the manager has managed the strategy. With regards to indexed mutual funds, determine if the corresponding indexes are broad-based, concentrated, actively or passively managed, successfully screened or use generally objective rules for establishing an investment strategy.
A realistic comparison: the headline winner is not always the better fit
Imagine that, let’s say, there’s an investor named Elena who is 41, and she wants a core U.S. stock holding in her rollover IRA account. She is comparing side-by-side two fund fact sheets from her online broker. Based on their fact sheets, Fund A has a better 1-year return than Fund B. Using only those fact sheets to determine funds’ attractiveness makes Fund A appear more attractive than the other. However, just because Fund B looks less interesting than Fund A, it may actually provide better solutions for Elena’s investment problems.

| Item | Fund A: U.S. Growth Leaders Fund | Fund B: Total Market Index ETF | What Elena should notice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Role and benchmark | Active, benchmarked to Russell 1000 Growth | Rules-based, benchmarked to a broad total market index | These are not the same job. |
| 1-year return | 28.8% | 22.1% | The big headline number favors Fund A. |
| 5-year annualized return | 11.4% | 14.3% | Longer-term context flips the story. |
| Expense ratio | 0.95% | 0.04% | That gap is too large to ignore for a core holding. |
| Portfolio turnover | 88% | 3% | Fund A trades far more, which can mean more friction. |
| Top-10 holdings | 58% of assets | 31% of assets | Fund A is much more concentrated. |
| Number of holdings and management | 42 holdings, current manager since 2022 | More than 3,000 holdings, index methodology | Fund A may be a satellite idea. Fund B is easier to defend as a core holding. |
On the RESET Scorecard, Fund B probably earns a 9 out of 10 for Elena’s purpose. Fund A might earn a 5. That does not make Fund A bad. It makes it different. If Elena wants a growth satellite, she can keep researching it. If she wants a core IRA fund, the fact sheet already told her enough to resist the flashy number. Cost math sharpens the point. If both funds earned the same 7% gross return for 15 years, a $50,000 investment with 0.95% annual expenses would finish at roughly $120,700, versus about $137,200 at 0.04%. That roughly $16,500 gap is not a forecast. It is a reminder that the quiet numbers often matter more than the loud ones.
Mistakes smart investors still make with fact sheets
- Comparing funds with different benchmarks and pretending the comparison is fair.
- Treating a yield figure like a promised paycheck without checking how that yield is defined.
- Assuming a no-load or low-expense fund is automatically low-cost after you factor in share class, spreads, and turnover.
- Looking at familiar top holdings and missing that the fund is heavily tilted to one sector, country, or style.
- Giving full credit for a 10-year track record to a manager who took over recently.
- Ignoring the date stamp on the fact sheet, especially for holdings, duration, credit quality, or yield data.
When the sheet is too thin to answer the real question
Glossy one page summaries can’t do justice to all strategies. It’s particularly applicable for new fund structures, covered-call funds, option income related funds including buffered/defined outcome ETFs; multi asset funds holding significant portion of their portfolio in leveraged/inverse investments may not be reciprocal to other investments. If the new investment has no 1 year plus of complete market cycles look first at fund structure, benchmark, and cost when in doubt as to which of two plain vanilla would be the ‘best’/closest match to the other, use a comparison tool like FINRA Fund Analyzer and review most recent statement or report focusing on fund turnover and benchmark details.
How to verify what the fact sheet is telling you
- Open the prospectus or summary prospectus and confirm that the objective, benchmark, risks, and fee table match the fact sheet.
- Open the latest shareholder report and check the line graph, annual return table, expense example, and portfolio turnover rate.
- For bond funds, verify which yield appears on the fact sheet and the date attached to it. Compare only like with like, such as 30-day SEC yield to 30-day SEC yield.
- For ETFs, look beyond the expense ratio. Check the average trading spread and whether shares often trade at a premium or discount to net asset value.
- If the fund is in a taxable account, pressure-test tax efficiency. High turnover and recurring distributions can matter more than a slightly better recent return.
- If you are using an adviser or a 401(k) lineup, confirm that the exact share class available to you is the one shown in the performance and fee data.

Bottom line
Begin with the fund’s purpose/role, its expected return, how much risk you are taking, and the fees associated with owning this fund. Then turn to performance results and see if the fund still fits your investment goals; if it does after this “reset,” you might want to add it to your list of possible funds for consideration. If it does not fit your checklist after this reverse order review then this page was primarily used for marketing purposes and you’ve done what you can to decide whether or not you want to invest in this fund.
Is a fund fact sheet enough to make an investment decision?
Usually not. It is a useful screening tool, but the prospectus gives the standardized disclosure on strategy, risks, fees, and performance, and the shareholder report adds context such as turnover and benchmark comparison.
What is the most misleading number on many fund fact sheets?
In many cases, the annual return from the start of a holding period is used to measure past performance via previous returns. Depending on the timing of your most recent investment(s), recent performance may reflect a singularly positive period that does not reflect a broad range of investment results to be expected within your specific asset class, or, an appropriate asset allocation for your investment horizon exceeds a benchmark.
Should I always choose the lowest expense ratio?
While cost should definitely be considered when comparing funds that perform similar tasks, it shouldn’t be the only factor to take into consideration. If one fund is more expensive than another fund, this may be acceptable as long as the fund provides an alternative means of exposure or the fund has a detailed explanation on how it will manage your investment in an active manner. When comparing funds with similar strategy, all-in cost should generally have higher relative importance.
How should I compare yield on bond fund fact sheets?
The first step to verify the yield labels will relate the 30-day SEC yield as an attractive apples to apples starting point. The second step to verify that you are comparing the correct yield category will include checking the duration, maturity, credit quality and expenses. The resulting difference in yield can create risk associated with credit or interest rates where higher yields may come with higher credit risks than lower yields.
Does fund size matter when I read a fact sheet?
At times, but generally as a secondary verification. Smaller ETFs typically have larger price differences when they are traded compared to larger ETFs being traded by larger active investment funds in less efficient markets. The size of the fund should not take precedence over how well it matches the investment strategy, the underlying index or the cost of ownership.
Why does share class matter if the fund name is the same?
Different classes of mutual funds may have different expenses, including but not limited to varying sales loads (or “loads”), 12b-1 fees, and expense ratios, which can provide different returns for all investors in that mutual fund. Be sure to verify that the share class listed in the fact sheet is the same class that you will be able to purchase.
References
- Investor.gov – Mutual Fund and ETF Fees and Expenses
- Investor.gov – How to Read a Mutual Fund Prospectus Part 1
- Investor.gov – How to Read a Mutual Fund Prospectus Part 2
- Investor.gov – Updated Investor Bulletin: How to Read a Mutual Fund or ETF Shareholder Report
- Investor.gov – Investor Bulletin: Performance Claims
- Investor.gov – Updated Investor Bulletin: Mutual Fund Classes
- SEC – Mutual Funds and ETFs: A Guide for Investors
- SEC – SEC Yield for Funds That Invest Significantly in TIPS
- FINRA – Mutual Funds
- FINRA – Using the FINRA Fund Analyzer