Thursday, January 3, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: Investors swarmed US stock ETFs as fiscal deal reached -Lipper

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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Investors swarmed US stock ETFs as fiscal deal reached -Lipper
Jan 3rd 2013, 23:57

Thu Jan 3, 2013 6:57pm EST

  By Sam Forgione      NEW YORK, Jan 3 (Reuters) - Investors in U.S.-based funds  pumped $7.17 billion into stock exchange-traded funds in the  latest week while pulling money out of bond funds as U.S.  lawmakers struck a deal to avert the "fiscal cliff" of tax hikes  and spending cuts, data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service  showed on Thursday.       The flood of cash into stock ETFs in the week ended Jan. 2  is the most in three weeks, and offset outflows of $3.48 billion  from stock mutual funds.       The combination of inflows into stock ETFs and outflows from  stock mutual funds resulted in net inflows of $3.7 billion into  stock funds overall for the week.      Bond funds, meanwhile, started the year with net outflows of  $330.2 million as investors withdrew $412.7 million from bond  ETFs and committed just $82.5 million to bond mutual funds.       Bond funds were largely favored in 2012 for their stable  returns and safety relative to stock funds, and suffered  outflows in just five reporting weeks throughout the year.      ETFs are generally believed to represent the investment  behavior of institutional investors, while mutual funds are  thought to represent the retail investor.      "Institutional investors had a better feeling that an  agreement would be reached before the deadline and therefore  anticipated a bump up in the markets," said Jeff Tjornehoj, head  of Americas Research at Lipper.      The benchmark S&P 500 stock index rose 3 percent over  the reporting period, with markets surging after U.S. President  Barack Obama and Congress reached a deal to prevent the looming  "fiscal cliff" of $600 billion in tax increases and spending  cuts that threatened to tip the U.S. economy into a recession.      The last-minute deal reached on Tuesday included an income  tax increase on families earning more than $450,000 per year and  limits on the amount of deductions they can take to lower their  tax bill. Not all issues were resolved, however, and spending  cuts of $109 billion in military and domestic programs were  delayed for just two months.      Institutional investors put $3.8 billion into the SPDR S&P  500 ETF, but also ventured outside the U.S. and gave $2.7  billion to international stock ETFs. Emerging markets were a  bright spot as $944 million in new cash flowed into the  iShares:MSCI Emerging Market fund.      The flows into emerging market ETFs may have been  opportunistic, said Tjornehoj of Lipper, as investors might have  anticipated that a budget deal in the U.S. could send emerging  market stocks higher.      With regard to bond ETFs, the outflows of $412.7 million  from showed modest improvement from the prior week, when  investors pulled $872.2 million from the funds.       Retail investors in particular soured on high-yield bond  mutual funds and withdrew $281.8 million, while institutional  investors pulled $190.9 million out of high-yield bond ETFs.      "There's a sense that, if equities are turning the corner,  why hold the proxy" said Tjornehoj of Lipper on investors'  flight from high-yield corporate bonds, which are seen by some  as a safer, debt version of stocks.      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      Count                             ($Bil)    Assets  ($Bil)         All Equity Funds          3.688     0.13    2,981.445   10,013   Domestic Equities         0.845     0.04    2,211.788   7,419   Non-Domestic Equities     2.843     0.38    769.657     2,594   All Taxable Bond Funds    -0.330    -0.02   1,511.830   4,763   All Money Market Funds    37.841    1.61    2,392.317   1,353   All Municipal Bond Funds  -0.013    -0.00   318.174     1,336  
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