"Market observers have been waiting for a sign that the
multi-year trend of investors buying fixed income while selling U.S. stocks
would reverse in a so-called 'great rotation,'" said Mike Rawson , fund analyst on Morningstar 's
passive funds research team. "Inflows of $15.5
billion for U.S.-stock funds, the largest monthly intake since
2004, and the first month of inflows in the last 23 for active U.S.-stock
funds, support this development. However, U.S.-stock funds experienced slower
organic growth than any other major asset class in January, and seasonal and
one-time factors such as lump-sum contributions to retirement accounts and
acceleration of dividend payments indicate that claims of a paradigm shift in
investor behavior may be premature."
Additional highlights from Morningstar 's
report on mutual fund flows:
- Continuing a trend that has persisted for more than
four years and demonstrating that investors have not abandoned fixed
income, the intermediate-term bond category had the greatest inflows in
January with
$10.5 billion . - Taxable-bond funds led all asset classes with inflows
of
$31.0 billion in January, followed by international-stock funds, which took in$18.4 billion during the month. - Vanguard topped all fund families in January with
overall inflows of
$17.6 billion , 87 percent of which flowed to the firm's passive lineup. Vanguard funds swept the top three spots for fund-level inflows, led by Vanguard Total Bond Market's inflows of$4.3 billion . American Funds saw its first monthly inflow sinceJune 2009 .
To view the complete report, please visit http://www.global.morningstar.com/janflows13.
For more information about Morningstar Asset Flows, please visit http://global.morningstar.com/assetflows.
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