Thursday, January 10, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: U.S. stock mutual funds gain $7.5 bln, most since 2001 -Lipper

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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U.S. stock mutual funds gain $7.5 bln, most since 2001 -Lipper
Jan 11th 2013, 03:10

Thu Jan 10, 2013 10:10pm EST

  By Sam Forgione      NEW YORK, Jan. 10 (Reuters) - Investors in U.S.-based funds  poured $7.53 billion into stock mutual funds, the most since  2001, after U.S. lawmakers reached a deal to avert tax increases  and spending cuts, data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service  showed on Thursday.       The inflow into stock mutual funds in the week ended January  9 was the biggest since May of 2001, while stock exchange-traded  funds gained $10.78 billion in new cash.       When combined, the sums of cash into the two fund groups  amounted to a massive $18.32 billion inflow into stock funds  overall. That is the most net new cash since mid-2008.        Bond funds, meanwhile, attracted $4.24 billion in new cash.  Bond mutual funds attracted $5.45 billion, the most since  October of 2011, while bond ETFs suffered outflows of $1.21  billion.      The new cash into stock mutual funds was a far greater  weekly turnout for the group than any other week last year, when  retail investors opted for bond mutual funds and stock  investments were dominated by opportunistic moves into ETFs.       "People were waiting to put money to work," said Tom Roseen,  head of research services at Lipper.       "We got a resolution, period. And that was looming over  everyone's heads," Roseen said on the "fiscal cliff" of $600  billion in tax hikes and spending cuts.      In a surprising turn, stock ETF investors pulled the most  money out of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, which has been a favorite for  investors in past weeks. Investors yanked $1.26 billion out of  the fund while catching exposure to emerging markets by giving  $2.94 billion to the ishares: MSCI Emerging Market fund.      Roseen said that investors sought to capture profits from  the SPDR index fund that tracks the benchmark U.S. stock index.      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 index fell a slight .1 percent  over the reporting period as news that the U.S. private sector  stepped up hiring last month and encouraging data on the U.S.   services sector clashed with caution ahead of corporate earnings  and concerns over remaining policy talks over the debt ceiling  and spending cuts.      On Jan. 1, President Barack Obama and Congress reached a  deal to raise taxes on the wealthiest U.S. citizens while  postponing spending cuts for two months. The deal, overall,  diminished the prospects of a major 2013 overhaul of the U.S.  tax code.      Roseen of Lipper said that the "relief" of the tax outcome  on capital gains and dividends led investors to put money back  to work in stock mutual funds.      Along with the stronger appetite for risk in stocks,  investors sought riskier bonds and pumped $1.11 billion into  high-yield "junk" bond funds, the most since mid-September.  Investors also gave $2.16 billion to investment-grade corporate  bond funds, while taking $1.07 billion out of safe-haven  Treasury funds, the most since October of last year.      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          18.316     0.61    3,004.2  10,044                                                6           Domestic Equities         9.244      0.42    2,228.7  7,447                                                4           Non-Domestic Equities     9.073      1.18    775.532  2,597   All Taxable Bond Funds    4.237      0.28    1,520.7  4,777                                                0           All Money Market Funds    10.065     0.42    2,392.8  1,335                                                3           All Municipal Bond Funds  1.551      0.49    320.853  1,339  
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