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						Investors pull $6.4 
						billion from U.S. stock funds ahead of Fed speech 
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		 [August 27, 2016] 
		By Trevor Hunnicutt 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors trimmed risk 
		assets before a gathering of central bankers on Friday, pulling $6.4 
		billion from U.S.-based stock funds in a course-reversal during the week 
		ended Aug. 24, data from Lipper showed on Thursday.
 
 The outflows, which came a week after cash poured into stock funds for 
		the first time in five weeks, are the last data showing U.S. fund 
		investors' behavior before Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks at 
		an annual central bankers' conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
 
 Yellen is expected to shed light on whether an interest-rate hike is 
		likely in 2016, a move that could force a reevaluation of assets, such 
		as corporate bonds and emerging market stocks, which have performed well 
		this year.
 
 "Everybody's keeping their eyes on Jackson Hole," said Tom Roseen, head 
		of research services for Thomson Reuters Lipper.
 
 "People are waiting for the catalyst" to drive the market one way or 
		another, Roseen said.
 
 Domestic stock funds posted $4.5 billion in outflows during the week, 
		while funds focused on international shares posted $1.8 billion in 
		outflows, the data showed.
 
		 
		Largely actively managed equity mutual funds posted $4.1 billion in 
		withdrawals, while mostly passive equity exchange-traded funds (ETFs) 
		sank by $2.3 billion during the week.
 In both cases the result adds to woes for stock funds, which have netted 
		assets in just six of the last 34 weeks tracked by Lipper.
 
 Another sign of the focus on the Fed: investors added $299 million to 
		"loan participation funds," marking the first time that category has 
		taken in money for four weeks straight since April 2014. The funds offer 
		yields that increase as rates rise.
 
 Emerging markets continued to be popular bets, with stock funds 
		targeting that asset class taking in $620 million for their eighth 
		consecutive week of net new cash. Bond funds focused on the developing 
		markets added $222 million and their tenth straight week of inflows.
 
 Yield-starved investors have turned to those markets for potentially 
		greater returns.
 
 European stock funds' outflows accelerated to $1.2 billion, their 
		largest since the week ended July 6. The funds have now posted outflows 
		for the past 12 weeks, according to Lipper.
 
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			Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 
			New York City, U.S., August 23, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			
 
Taxable bond funds in the United States remained a popular place for investors 
searching for relative safety and higher yields. Those funds took in $2.7 
billion during the week, their third straight week of inflows, the data showed. 
The following is a broad breakdown of the flows for the week, including ETFs:
 Sector Flow Chg Pct of Assets($ Count
 
 ($ blns) Assets blns)
 
 All Equity Funds -6.351 -0.12 5,380.693 12,014
 
 Domestic Equities -4.519 -0.12 3,815.437 8,551
 
 Non-Domestic Equities -1.832 -0.12 1,565.256 3,463
 
 All Taxable Bond Funds 2.739 0.12 2,332.916 6,054
 
 All Money Market Funds 20.911 0.89 2,368.789 1,080
 
 All Municipal Bond Funds 0.801 0.21 386.398 1,411
 
 (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Daniel Bases and James Dalgleish)
 
				 
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