Jim Cramer is a big fan of Apple Inc. [stckqut]AAPL[/stckqut], but that doesn’t mean the investor thinks they will be a success in every market. On Mad Money on Wednesday, Jim Cramer expressed doubt about Apple CarPlay, the firm’s in-car iOS platform. Cramer says that Apple will not dominate the market.

The comment came in response to a user question about Harman International Industries Inc. [stckqut]HAR[/stckqut]. The firm makes in-car systems right now and has a market cap of $8.7 billion. Shares have fallen by more than 13% in the last month, and one investor was looking to find out why. Cramer said it all came down to Apple.

“Problem is the Apple car play. People think Apple will take over car infotainment. They are wrong and you should stick with Harman,” he told the caller. That’s far from negative on Apple’s CarPlay, but it does present some lack of faith.

Source: Jim Cramer Doesn’t Believe Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) Will Take Over Car Infotainment

While I have no problem with mutual fund managers giving reduced rates to their most loyal investors, I do not encourage the practice.

First of all, I don’t think that investors should be paying for managed mutual funds. As a group, they simply are not well managed and I have written about this many times.

Second, if the company running those mutual funds needed that revenue to survive then “loyalty rewards” are simply going to raise costs for “less loyal” investors. It will be similar to robbing Peter to pay Paul. Sure, Paul gets a better deal, but Peter is likely to not like the situation and may find a competitive offer.

In a blog post for the CFA Institute earlier this month, Ted Seides, president of Protégé Partners, a firm in New York that oversees $2 billion in portfolio of hedge funds run by other managers, called for hedge funds to offer “loyalty rewards,” or management fees that would decline steadily for investors who stayed put for years on end. A hedge fund charging a 1.5% annual management fee (alongside a 15% or 20% share of investment returns) might reduce that to 1.3% for a client who held continually for five years, 0.8% after 10 years and so on.

“It’s unbelievable” that so few investors have demanded that money managers offer such arrangements, Mr. Seides says. “It’s kind of crazy.”

Source: Why Mutual Funds Should Pay Investors for Loyalty – MoneyBeat – WSJ