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cheapbag214s
Joined: 27 Jun 2013
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said Deborah Fuhr |
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Investors run from pro stock pickers, now prefer exchange-traded funds
NEW YORK, Jan. 4 () -- Investors are leaving mutual funds managed by professional managers and shifting money into lower-cost funds that echo the broader market,[url=http://www.51guomi.com/]jimmy choo sale[/url], an analysis says.Through November, investors pulled $119.3 billion in 2012 from the category named actively managed U.S. stock funds,[url=http://www.yodasblog.com/]christian louboutin outelt sale[/url], the biggest yearly outflow since 2008,[url=http://www.tiluband.com/]moncler outlet[/url], research firm Morningstar, Inc., reported.At the same time, $30.4 billion was poured into U.S. stock exchange-traded funds. When combined with bond exchange-traded funds, total inflow was $154 billion, the largest since 2008,[url=http://www.sgarziasociates.com]michael kors outlet store[/url], The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.The moves indicate growing investor distaste for volatility and suggest money managers of stock funds, which charge high fees but offer the prospect of higher returns, have underperformed the benchmark stock indices, the Journal said.Inflows to exchange-traded funds accelerated in December, to $28.1 billion from $20.6 billion in November, said Deborah Fuhr, a partner in London's ETFGI LLP."ETFs have really won people over," said Fuhr."There has been an overriding theme of anxiety among investors about the stock market," said Avi Nachmany, director of research at research and consulting firm Strategic Insight. "Those companies whose focus is on stocks are suffering."
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Tue 19:25, 29 Oct 2013 |
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