Fidelity Magellan Encounters Rough Straits
It's an ignominious time for the mighty Fidelity (FMAGX Quote)Magellan.
The fund's cash position in July fell to its lowest level since the boom years as investors withdrew $1.3 billion more than they put into the behemoth fund. The fund had 0.5% of its assets in cash as of July 31, according to Fidelity's Web site, down from 3.2% at the end of June. Stock funds faced massive redemptions across the board in July, though. July's equity outflows of $40.9 billion were the largest since September 2001, according to AMG Data Services. February 2000 and July 2002 were the only months that Magellan had net outflows greater than $1 billion since 1998. In February 2000, Magellan's cash position was negative 0.2%, indicating that manager Robert Stansky borrowed cash to meet redemptions. It's no secret where investors are putting their money these days: Taxable bond funds reported record inflows of $17.6 billion for July. July's activity enabled Magellan's kingpin counterpart in the bond world, (PTTAX Quote)Pimco Total Return, to strip Magellan of its title as the largest actively managed mutual fund and second-largest mutual fund of any type. In March 2000, Magellan was the 800-pound gorilla with more than $109 billion in assets. Since then, investor redemptions and market depreciation have shrunk Magellan's assets by 45% to $60.3 billion. Over the same time period, though, Pimco Total Return, run by Bill Gross, more than doubled its asset base from $31 billion to $64 billion.- Loading Comments...
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