Thursday, December 13, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: U.S. fund investors pour $8.68 billion into stock ETFs -Lipper

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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U.S. fund investors pour $8.68 billion into stock ETFs -Lipper
Dec 14th 2012, 02:50

Thu Dec 13, 2012 9:50pm EST

  By Sam Forgione      NEW YORK, Dec. 13 (Reuters) - Investors in U.S.-based funds  pumped the most money into stock exchange-traded funds since  mid-September while also putting money into higher-quality  corporate bonds in one of the last reporting weeks of the year,  data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service showed on Thursday.       Stock ETFs pulled in $8.68 billion in investor cash in the  week ended Dec. 12, the most since mid-September. The inflows  offset outflows of $3.71 billion from stock mutual funds,  leading to net inflows of $4.97 billion into stock funds.      Investors were less drawn to bond funds overall than they  were to stocks, and committed a net $1.24 billion into the  funds. Bond mutual funds attracted $674.6 million, while bond  ETFs attracted $570.34 million, which was the most cash  committed to the passive funds in five weeks.      ETFs are generally believed to represent the investment  behavior of institutional investors, while mutual funds are  thought to represent the retail investor.      Institutional investors such as asset management firms tend  to invest in ETFs toward the end of the year rather than in  active funds, said Lipper analyst Matthew Lemieux.      Uncertainty over whether U.S. President Barack Obama and  Congress will resolve the "fiscal cliff" of $600 billion in tax  increases and spending cuts could also be motivating the less  active investments, Lemieux added.      Despite gridlock over the budget deal, the benchmark S&P 500   stock index rose 1.36 percent over the reporting period.  Data showing that U.S. non-farm payrolls added 146,000 jobs in  November temporarily boosted confidence, although concerns over  the "fiscal cliff" and data showing a plunge in consumer  sentiment tempered optimism.      On Wednesday, the last day of Lipper's reporting period, the  Federal Reserve fulfilled expectations by ramping up its  monetary stimulus and committing to monthly purchases of $85  billion in Treasuries and mortgage-backed bonds in an effort to  improve U.S. economic growth.      Among stock funds, investors put $3.87 billion into the SPDR  S&P 500 ETF fund, and $1.57 billion into the iShares: MSCI  Emerging Markets Fund, another ETF.      Among bond funds, investors poured $1.29 billion into funds  that hold investment-grade corporate bonds, the most in five  weeks.      Investors may consider riskier high-yield corporate bonds -  whose funds attracted just $258.9 million over the period - as  overpriced, while higher-quality investment-grade bonds also  have the advantage of being less risky, said Lemieux.      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          4.970     0.17      2,891.889  10,050   Domestic Equities         2.691     0.13      2,155.319  7,446   Non-Domestic Equities     2.279     0.32      736.571    2,604   All Taxable Bond Funds    1.245     0.08      1,509.496  4,734   All Money Market Funds    4.039     0.17      2,349.824  1,390   All Municipal Bond Funds  0.311     0.10      324.045    1,340  
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