Going With the Outflow: Investors Keep Pulling Money From Stock Funds
Stock funds are sagging and fund investors are bailing. This could be the beginning of a fairly vicious cycle.
March 2. Over the five trading days ended March 15, bond and balanced funds, which combine stock and bond holdings, took in $400 million more than they lost to redemptions, while money market or cash funds took in a whopping $6.8 billion. This movement of cash from stock funds and into bond and cash funds is becoming familiar. Last year, stock funds averaged a $4.7 billion weekly in-flow according to TrimTabs.com, but this year that's down to just $800 million. At the same time, average flows to bond and money market funds are sharply higher than last year's.| 2001: A Less Risky Odyssey This year's average weekly cash flows reflect a taste for less risky fare as fund investor lick their wounds and prepare to pay steep tax bills. Figures in billions of dollars. | |
| U.S. Stock Funds | |
| 2001 | $0.8 |
| 2000 | 4.7 |
| 1999 | 2.9 |
| Bonds/Balanced Funds | |
| 2001 | $0.4 |
| 2000 | -1.5 |
| 1999 | 1.6 |
| Money Market Funds | |
| 2001 | $5.7 |
| 2000 | 1.8 |
| 1999 | 3.2 |
| Source: TrimTabs.com. Data through March 15. | |
| An About Face So far this March's fund flows illustrate a major shift in sentiment. Figures in billions of dollars | ||
| March 2001 | March 2000 | |
| U.S. Stock funds | $-13.1 | $35.4 |
| Bond and Balanced funds | 1.1 | -13.8 |
| Source: TrimTabs.com. Data through March 15. | ||
The Junk Pile
For better or worse, fund shops are still rolling out health care and biotech sector funds, even though the sector is buckling. Thanks to a surging biotech sector, last year health funds lapped every other stock fund category, ringing up a 55.4% gain, compared with a 9.1% loss for the S&P 500, according to Morningstar. In a familiar pattern, investors' cash followed hot returns. The then 40-fund category took in more than $13.5 billion last year, smashing the previous record for in-flows, which was about $5 billion set in 1998. Now that biotech stocks have cooled and the average health care fund is down a whopping 23.7% already this year, that serious dip is erasing many of last year's gains, leaving the category down 7.2% over the past 12 months. Still, in the past 45 days four new health funds have rolled out or registered with regulators. In February the exchange-traded iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology Index fund and the Turner Health & Biotech fund were born. And this month John Hancock Funds launched the John Hancock Biotechnology fund to complement its struggling (JHGRX Quote)John Hancock Life Sciences fund. And Oak Associates, best known for its tech-investing acumen, filed paperwork with regulators last Thursday to launch the Oak Health Sciences fund on June 1. Are these funds well timed or are these funds just latent performance chasers? Time will tell.- Loading Comments...
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