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Funds Flows Sluggish in August

Intermediate-term bond funds remain popular kids, and emerging-markets funds get some attention, too.

August was a slow month, with markets relatively flat and no dramatic movement in flows. Both the S&P 500 and the MSCI EAFE returned a barely-there 0.1% for the month. U.S. equity funds continued to bleed cash on the active side. Passive U.S.-equity funds continued to attract investor money, although August’s estimated inflow of $16.4 billion was only half as large as the $33.8 billion they received in July.

The international-equity story is similar: outflows from active and inflows to passive. Although, when digging deeper into the numbers, an important detail comes to light: The total international-equity flow for August consists of an estimated $7.3 outflow from developed markets and a $6.2 inflow to emerging markets.

Taxable- and municipal-bond funds continued to accumulate flows, reflecting investors’ preference for a steady income stream and hinting that most investors are not that worried about rising interest rates. Commodity funds saw a trend reversal in August with a $1.0 outflow on the passive side.

Other notable asset-flow trends include:

  • The top Morningstar Category remained unchanged from last month: intermediate bond. Investors' preference for intermediate-bond funds is easy to understand, because short-term bonds don't yield enough and long-term ones have higher interest-rate risk.
  • The large growth, world allocation, and Europe stock categories sustained the largest outflows in August.

Access the full Morningstar U.S. Asset Flows Update here.

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About the Author

Alina Lamy

Senior Project Manager
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Alina Lamy is a senior project manager on the quantitative research team at Morningstar. She writes the firm’s monthly asset flows commentary on open-end mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. She provides research, data analysis, graphics, and editorial coverage for multiple Morningstar publications including the Morningstar Markets Observer, Image Library, Article Library, and Andex charts. Alina has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Bloomberg, and Barron’s.

Lamy holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s degree in business administration from the Illinois Institute of Technology.

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