Australian Investors Pull Money From Domestic Share Funds
Australian Investors Pull Money From Domestic Share Funds in 2012
Australian managed fund investors pulled money from domestic share funds and favoured fixed income vehicles in 2012, mirroring trends globally, according to Morningstar's inaugural Global Fund Flows Trend Report.
The report examines the trends that drove managed funds flows in five key markets - Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan, and the United States - and provides a worldwide overview that includes these regions as well as other markets in which Morningstar tracks fund performance and assets.
"The Global Fund Flows Trend Report provides a snapshot of the key trends in the managed funds industry worldwide, giving the Australian funds industry, financial advisers, and investors the opportunity to understand the broader global context and drivers," Morningstar Australasia Chief Executive Anthony Serhan said. "The results for 2012 show that the Australian funds industry had a great deal in common with other countries, in particular the withdrawals from share funds and the strong demand for fixed interest offerings."
Australian Highlights
• Investors withdrew just over
A$5.33 billion from the Australian managed funds industry in
2012. Australian share funds bore the brunt despite the
comparatively strong performance of the Australian
sharemarket, investors withdrawing A$9.65 billion from
Australian share funds over the year, or nine percent of
assets at the start of the year.
• Fixed interest funds
were in stronger demand. Healthy returns combined with
continued inflows meant that most fixed interest fund
managers' assets grew steadily. There was however a
noticeable shift in preferences: diversified fixed interest
funds garnered over A$2.93 billion at the expense of more
focused vehicles.
• Multi-sector/balanced funds took in
the largest net inflows in 2012, totalling A$6.46 billion,
and continued to burgeon. This category remains a major
beneficiary of mandated superannuation retirement savings,
and its flows therefore do not necessarily represent managed
fund investor sentiment.
• Industry superannuation
funds, led by AustralianSuper, benefitted greatly from
retirement savings inflows. Schroders (A$1.62 billion) also
attracted a substantial inflow in 2012, while boutique
Magellan continued to punch above its weight and attracted a
sizeable A$1.10 billion.
• Other than industry
superannuation funds, Magellan Global was the standout at
the individual fund level, amassing more than A$1.0 billion
in 2012. While one boutique prospered, another struggled.
Platinum International, renowned investor Kerr Neilson's
flagship international share fund, has suffered persistent
outflows. The A$1.15 billion which exited in 2012 reflected
angst over the short- to medium-term underperformance,
despite the fund's stellar long-term
results.
• Australian exchange-traded funds have
attracted strong inflows in recent years, but the sector
remains a small fish in the Australian managed funds pond
(A$6.0 billion out of around A$1.0 trillion). This means
that traditional index funds have so far remained the
vehicle of choice for investors seeking passive exposure in
Australia, and these have experienced flows more or less
akin to their active counterparts, although on a much
smaller scale.
Global
Highlights
• The global funds management
industry grew at a 3.90 percent organic growth rate in 2012,
despite worldwide economic uncertainty. US$565.0 billion
flowed into managed funds globally during the year. These
massive inflows however fell short of 2009 and 2010, which
saw inflows of US$746.0 billion and US$672.0 billion
respectively. The prevailing global trend in 2012 was
investors' hunger for yield and quest for the perceived
safety of fixed income funds, which gathered US$535.0
billion worldwide in 2012, or nearly 95.0 percent of
long-term net inflows.
• US fixed income, which houses
the intermediate-term bond category and US heavyweights
PIMCO Total Return and DoubleLine Total Return, is by far
the largest long-term global category, with nearly US$2.0
trillion in assets. US investors contributed US$199.0
billion of the category's US$227.0 billion total inflow in
2012. The PIMCO fund is by far the world's largest
actively-managed strategy, with US$442.0 billion in
assets.
• Interest from cross-border investors
propelled funds in the US fixed income category to a 47.0
percent organic growth rate in 2012. Many of the most
popular offerings are tended by US-based managers including
AllianceBernstein, Muzinich, Neuberger Berman, and
PIMCO.
• While 78.0 percent of worldwide managed fund
and exchange-traded fund assets still reside in
actively-managed offerings, passive products captured 41.0
percent of estimated net flows in 2012 (US$355.0 billion).
With the exception of Australia and New Zealand, index funds
grew faster than actively-managed funds in every
geographical region during the year, and the United States
is leading the way in its appetite for low-cost passive
strategies.
• Vanguard and PIMCO took in 16.0 and 18.0
percent respectively of worldwide long-term managed fund
inflows in 2012.
About the
Global Fund Flows Trend Report
The Global Fund
Flows Trend Report examines each key market in detail,
analysing flows by attributes such as broad asset class,
Morningstar category, and fund manager, as well as new fund
launches and the active versus passive dynamic in each
market. The commentary encompasses the 71 domiciles in which
Morningstar tracks funds flows, accounting for US$20.70
trillion in assets.
To view the complete report, visit http://www.global.morningstar.com/flowstrend2012.
For more information about Morningstar Asset Flows, visit http://global.morningstar.com/assetflows.
The Asset Flows module is a component of Morningstar
DirectTM, Morningstar's web-based global institutional
investment analysis platform (http://corporate.morningstar.com/US/asp/subject.aspx?xmlfile=40.xml).
ENDS