Thursday, November 29, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: Investors swarm into stock ETFs amid "fiscal cliff" hopes-Lipper

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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Investors swarm into stock ETFs amid "fiscal cliff" hopes-Lipper
Nov 30th 2012, 00:54

Thu Nov 29, 2012 7:54pm EST

  By Sam Forgione      NEW YORK, November 29 (Reuters) - Investors in U.S.-based  funds have pumped the most new money into stock exchange-traded  funds since mid-September, while adding to bond funds amid  growing optimism U.S. lawmakers will avoid the looming "fiscal  cliff" of tax hikes and spending cuts.       Data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service showed on Thursday  that Stock ETFs raked in $7.66 billion in new investor cash in  the week ended Nov. 28, the most money since the week the U.S.  Federal Reserve announced its extended stimulus plan.      Meanwhile, bond mutual funds and ETFs combined attracted  $1.81 billion in investor cash, the most in three weeks and more  than doubling the previous week's inflows of $670.57 million.      A large percentage of equity demand flowed into the SPDR S&P  500 ETF fund, which attracted $3.64 billion in cash,  while investors latched onto emerging market stocks by pumping  $1.37 billion into the iShares:MSCI Emerging Market fund.       Stock mutual funds, however, suffered outflows for the third  straight week as retail investors took $280.72 million out of  the funds. The amount still reflects an improvement from the  previous week, when investors took $2.89 billion out of the  funds, which was the most since early August.      ETFs are generally believed to represent the investment  behavior of institutional investors, while mutual funds are  thought to represent the retail investor.      The benchmark S&P 500 stock index rose 1.36 percent  over the reporting period, despite uncertainty over whether U.S.  President Barack Obama and Congress would reach a deal on the   budget. President Obama's statement on Wednesday that he hoped  to close a deal in four weeks boosted markets.      "There's hope that the 'fiscal cliff' (deal) will be reached  sooner than later," said Jeff Tjornehoj, head of Lipper Americas  Research, who also said the optimism spurred the inflows into  stock ETFs.      Among bond funds, investors favored higher-quality debt and  poured $965.62 million into investment-grade corporate bond  funds, which accounted for more than half of the overall inflows  into bond funds.      Investors who are "slow to accept the trend" into stocks  favored investment-grade corporate bonds, said Tjornehoj.      Funds that hold U.S. Treasuries, meanwhile, had outflows of  $208.3 million, the first loss in demand in four weeks.      "As (investors) look more approvingly at equities, they show  less preference for safer assets such as Treasuries," said  Tjornehoj.      The weekly Lipper fund flow data is compiled from reports  issued by U.S.-domiciled mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.      The following is a broad breakdown of the flows for the  week, including exchange-traded funds (in $ billions):    Sector                    Flow Chg  % Assets  Assets     Count                             ($Bil)              ($Bil)        All Equity Funds          7.379     0.26      2,842.856  10,000   Domestic Equities         4.923     0.23      2,131.643  7,408   Non-Domestic Equities     2.456     0.35      711.213    2,592   All Taxable Bond Funds    1.806     0.12      1,496.501  4,671   All Money Market Funds    11.383    0.49      2,331.338  1,394   All Municipal Bond Funds  0.545     0.17      323.562    1,339  
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