Thursday, January 1, 2009

"one of the biggest flights to safety the industry has seen."

The Aversion To Risk and Accompanying Flight To Safety have been something to behold. All because of an Avalanche Of Foreclosures followed by a Calling Run. Here's proof from the FT:

"
Flight to safety hits mutual funds with $320bn outflow

By Deborah Brewster in New York

Published: January 1 2009 23:28 | Last updated: January 1 2009 23:28

Investors pulled a net $320bn from mutual funds in 2008, a record in both dollar terms and as a percentage of assets, in one of the biggest flights to safety the industry has seen.

The move out of what were previously regarded( NO GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES ) as safe and stable investments followed a record year of investor inflows in 2007.

However, it appears that outflows stabilised and even reversed in the final weeks of the year( WE HAVE BEGUN TO SEE SIGNS OF THE DIMINUTION ). Investors put a net $23bn into equity funds during December and withdrew only $3.5bn from bond funds, less than in earlier months.

Equity funds had outflows of $233.5bn in the year to December 29, with bond funds seeing outflows of $58.2bn and balanced funds – which include both securities – having outflows of $28bn, according to Emerging Portfolio Funds Research, which tracks fund flows in most of the world.

The data include both retail and institutional investors. The total outflow of $320bn does not include money market funds.

Almost every money manager has seen a drop in long-term assets this year as a result of net outflows and a decline in performance.

Much of the cash withdrawn went into money market funds, which saw inflows of $422bn during the year, lifting their total assets to a record $3,720bn.

Bank deposits( FDIC INSURED ) also saw increases during the year.

More than 4 per cent of equity fund assets were withdrawn during the year, a record since EPFR began keeping records in 1995.

This is greater than the percentage of assets investors pulled from hedge funds during the year, although hedge fund outflows have been partly halted by managers’ suspending or limiting redemptions. This is not an option available to mutual fund managers, who market their funds as offering daily liquidity.

The main, if not the only, growth for money managers this year has been in money market funds, but these have generated several problems of their own. Earlier in the year many ran into trouble because of exposure to subprime securities.

One fund, the Reserve, “broke the buck”, with the value of assets falling below the level investors paid in.

More recently, as interest rates fell to near zero, the funds have been able to eke out only tiny yields which offer little return to investors and provide no profit to the firms running them."

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