BlackRock's U.S.-based
active funds post record 2016 withdrawals: Morningstar
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[January 04, 2017]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Investors pulled $19.3 billion from BlackRock Inc's
U.S.-based actively managed mutual funds in 2016, Morningstar Inc
estimates showed on Tuesday, a record high as the investment industry
struggles to restrain an exodus to lower-cost investments.
The funds posted nearly $8.5 billion in outflows during the fourth
quarter, the research service said.
An industry bellwether, New York-based BlackRock also owns one of the
most prized businesses in asset management, its iShares exchange-traded
funds franchise.
That business has profited from investor's shift from active to passive
funds. Many ETFs are relatively low cost and aim merely to track the
market, not to beat it.
U.S.-based actively managed stock funds suffered $288 billion in
withdrawals in 2016 through November, the largest on record, according
to Thomson Reuters Lipper service. The figure tops outflows of $139
billion in 2015 and $218 billion in 2008.
On the passive side, stock index mutual funds and equity exchange-traded
funds each attracted about the same amount of new cash, more than $112
billion apiece in 2016, Lipper said.
Earlier Tuesday, the world's largest asset manager said it took in $140
billion into its ETF business overall during 2016, a new global record
and larger than its rivals.
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The BlackRock sign is pictured in the Manhattan borough of New York,
in this October 11, 2015 file photo. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/Files
Some
index-tracking ETFs charge as little as $3 annually for every $10,000 they
manage, while the average charged by U.S. stock mutual fund managers is $131,
according to data for 2015 from the Investment Company Institute trade group.
The active fund withdrawals come as BlackRock has been working to boost the
investment performance of its stockpicking managers by introducing more data
mining and rules-based investment techniques to its traditionalist teams, which
it calls "Fundamental Active Equity."
Performance showed signs of improvement in November, with the percentage of
BlackRock funds holding the top Morningstar star ratings over three years
increasing to 64 percent, up from 51 percent in October and compared to a 33
percent industry average, according to Credit Suisse AG.
BlackRock is slated to report its fourth quarter and full-year results on Jan.
13. The company did not respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Sandra Maler, Bernard Orr)
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