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May 2007 Stock Exodus Despite Upturn
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Investors pulled almost 10 billion from mutual funds focused on U.S. stocks in May, even as the market showed signs of an upturn. The redemptions, vs. $1.71 inflow in April, were the most since February 2003, when investors pulled $10.3 billion from U.S. stock funds. In June '06, domestic stock funds waved goodbye to $9.5 billion amid a 15% summer slump in the Nasdaq. World equity funds saw an inflow of $11.54 billion in May. That continued a strong performance in April, when they got $16.5 billion in new money. All told, stock funds brought in $1.55 billion in new money in May, down from $18.21 billion in April. So far this year, investors have put $84 billion into stock funds. That's far less than the $121.3 billion they'd enlisted between January and May in 2006. In May, the S&P 500 ended 3.26% higher and the Nasdaq composite gained 3.15%. The Dow Jones stood out with a 4.32% gain. Investors put $2.02 billion into hybrid funds, which hold both stocks and bonds. That was roughly the same as the $2.55 billion inflow in April. Mixed equity funds returned 2.09% in May and 6.54% year to date. Bond Fund Flow Bond funds won over $21.28 billion in May, up from $13.52 billion in April. Taxable bond funds swelled by $17.71 billion in May vs. $12.20 billion in April. Municipal bond funds got $3.58 billion in May -- more than double April's inflow of $1.33 billion. Wloszczyna cites the growing popularity of target-date funds, which buy both bonds and stocks, as one of the driving forces behind the trend in bonds. For the year to date, bond funds' inflow tally was $79.77 billion, not far behind stock funds' $84 billion and up from $21.01 billion in the year-earlier period. Government bonds on average fell 0.77% in May, but have returned 1.33% year to date. Money market funds -- which are more volatile, as institutions account for two-thirds of the action -- had an inflow of $57.57 billion in May vs. an outflow of $11.26 billion in April. In all, investors poured $24.85 billion into long-term mutual funds in May. Total assets in all funds, including money market funds, increased by 3% to $11.396 trillion in May. The figure stood at $10.414 trillion on Dec. 31. Fidelity took in $7.5 billion in new money in May. It's received $23.3 billion year to date. Contributions have slowed significantly from last year. Fidelity investors had plopped down $38 billion between January and May in 2006, says Fidelity spokesman Adam Banker. Vanguard reported $8.3 billion in net flows in May vs. $6.7 billion in April. American Funds' inflow into stock and bond funds amounted to $5.4 billion in May, according to Strategic Insight Mutual Fund Research and Consulting. Investors seemed to have a slightly better disposition toward U.S. stock funds in June. They put in $5.88 billion of new money, according to TrimTabs.com. But investors still favored world equity funds, which got an estimated $12.82 billion. Join the Economics Community!
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Barry
Mr. Do It All

Jun 30, 2007, 12:36 PM
Post #1 of 1
(1860 views)
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