Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.U.S. Treasury Bond Teetering Tower Of Babel, Fed Stuck At 0% Forever - Jim_Willie_CB
2.Gold and Silver Long-Term Trading Signal - J_W_Jones
3.Europe One Nation (Under Germany) - John_Mauldin
4.London 2012 Olympics of Cronyism, Vested Interests Selling Torches on Ebay - Nadeem_Walayat
5. Don't Worry About Your Kids' Economic Future, Worry about Yours - Gary_North
6.Gold Bubble? Demand Data Continues To Show No Bubble - GoldCore
7.What If California Were Greece? Is Europe Coming Together or Flying Apart? - John_Mauldin
8.Economic Recovery or Collapse? Bet on Collapse - Financial Crisis Could Destroy Western Civilization - Paul_Craig_Roberts
9.Uranium Is a Deep-Value Sector - The_Energy_Report
10.Euro-Zone Crisis Real Deal, Warning What Follows is EXTREMELY BAD - Graham_Summers
Last 5 Days Analysis
Has Gold Price Hit Bottom, and What Will Drive it to $10,000? - 31st May 12
Myths and Realities of Returning to a Gold Standard - 31st May 12
Financial Markets 'May Be Right' in their Current Gold Mining Share Pricing - 31st May 12
The Pending Rush to Buy Gold and Silver - 31st May 12
Financial Market Forecasts Last Chance - 31st May 12
Troubled Times for World Oil - 31st May 12
Gold Price Surgers Higher, Safe Haven "Tipping Point"? - 31st May 12
Gold Mining Stocks: Now is the Time to Buy - 31st May 12
Slash Your Risk and Make Money with Traded Options - 31st May 12
US Unemployment and the Ubiquitous 'Zombie Job' Market - 31st May 12
Reform of US Monetary System: Message of 12 Year Old Goes Viral - 30th May 12
Coal and Shale Gas: America's Energy Siblings Are Locked in Rivalry - 30th May 12
Stock Market Free fall Crash is Imminent - 30th May 12
Gold Capped atg $1,580, Hit by Another Concentrated Burst Of Selling On High Volume - 30th May 12
United States is Going Down Slow, Debt Problem is Global - 30th May 12
Growth in U.S. National Debt - 30th May 12
Expecting Crude Oil Prices to End 2012 Higher - 30th May 12
Why Apple is Too Rich For the Dow Jones Stocks Index - 30th May 12
Investing in Japan: Is There Light at the End of the Tunnel? - 30th May 12
Are Capital Controls Coming to America? - 30th May 12
Ten Ways the US Is Worse Than It Was In 1947 - 30th May 12
Euro-Zone Crisis Delay and Pray, Stock Market Not Bearish Enough to Support a Rally - 30th May 12
FaceBook Investors Zuckerberged, 36% Crash, Clueless Telegraph Implies Cheap at $38 But Expensive at $29 - 30th May 12
Gold’s “Contrarian Moment” - 29th May 12
Espana en Fuego - 29th May 12
The 152-Year-Old Brain That Changed the Course of Science - 29th May 12
Five Ways Investors Not to Get "Facebooked" - 29th May 12
Warming up For the Battle Royale in Mobile Wallet Technology - 29th May 12
The Disease is our Monetary System - 29th May 12
Graduates of 2012 Face Consequences of the Fourth Turning - 29th May 12
More Stock Market Interim Rally Ahead? - 29th May 12
Cleantech Consolidates Before The Next Big Push - 28th May 12
Will Gold and Silver Fall Hard with the Euro? - 28th May 12
Gold Bar Demand in China Surged 51% to 213.9 Tons In 2011 - 28th May 12
Facebook - How Wall Street Really Works - 28th May 12
Strong Evidence of an Important Low in Gold Stocks - 28th May 12
"Crash is Over", U.S. Housing Market has Bottom Declared - 27th May 12
Greece Could Implode the Second Bailout and the EU by Mid-June - 27th May 12
Are we to Bame Nixon for Fed Money Printing Market Trends? - 27th May 12
Germany, Greece and the Game of "Chicken" - 27th May 12
U.S. Muni Bond Market Debt Default Tsunami - 26th May 12
What If California Were Greece? Is Europe Coming Together or Flying Apart? - 26th May 12
Stock Market Downtrend May Have Bottomed - 26th May 12
A Fair Price For Energy In Europe ? - 26th May 12
An Urgent Update on America's Energy Megatrend - 26th May 12
Don't Worry About Your Kids' Economic Future, Worry about Yours - 26th May 12
Who's Winning and Who's Losing from Facebook's Botched IPO - 25th May 12
Facebook Stock Price Gravitates to Analysts’ Average Value Estimate of $28: But Which Valuation is Right? - 25th May 12
Merkel’s thoughts on ticker tape, Euro is no longer a friend to Germany - 25th May 12
Euro to Surge - 25th May 12
What Can We Infer From the Gold Dow Ratio? - 25th May 12
Gold's Potential Move From Tier 3 to Tier 1 Capital - 25th May 12
Euro Panic, ECB Out of funds, and Germany Out of Patience - 25th May 12
Grow Your Stocks Portfolio With The "Eye in the Sky" - 25th May 12
What Facebook is Really Worth - 25th May 12
America today is pro-war, pro-capitalist, pro-empire and in retrograde! - 25th May 12
US Decides to Backstop the Anglo-American Derivatives Exchanges with Fed Dollars - 'Too Big To Fail' - 25th May 12
Uranium Is a Deep-Value Sector - 25th May 12
Debt Crisis Investment Critical Mega Developments & Select Gold Antidote - 25th May 12
U.S. Government Budget Deficit Sorting Out America's Fiscal Cliff Issue - 25th May 12
The European Union (EU) the New Soviet Union (NSU) - 25th May 12
Financial Market Forecasts - Free Report - 25th May 12

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Stock Market Panic Over ? Find Out Now!

Closing the Doors on Return Chasers: Mutual Fund Inflows Create Problems

Stock-Markets / Investing 2009 Oct 26, 2009 - 05:26 PM

By: Paul_Petillo

Stock-Markets

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleLike a torrential downpour can overwhelm gutters, flood streets and generally create the kind of havoc only water can, too much money flowing into mutual funds can also leave a mark on both new investors and those of record.


Now that the markets seem to be hellbent on leading the recovery (although there is still a popular consensus that this is not the real thing without jobs and earnings that are built on growth rather than cost-cutting), you have to wonder what is going on? Why is being asked quite frequently these days and many of the answers point to too much money on the sidelines suddenly feeling better about the opportunities and the fear of missing the recovery.

Investors who may have sold their stakes in funds that had done well for them in the past and then hurt them dramatically over the last part of 2008 are eyeballing this return to glory, ignoring the recent past at little more suddenly that I would have anticipated they would. Rushing back into the market is not what mutual funds need right now.

The Upside is the Downside
When investors flee, the remaining shareholders pay the price of staying. There are transaction costs and taxes to be paid (if the fund is forced to sell winning stocks to pay for redemptions) that are left for the fund to pay, passing on those costs. But those shareholders might benefit in the long run if their fund has positioned itself for the recovery. In fact, many investors are finding that staying put has them very close to the even point of where they closed the 2007 investment year.

But the problem with this rush is that it too causes an increase in costs for transactions and creates the possibility that too much money chasing too few stocks begins to artificially inflate those shares and we are off to the bubble races again. Some funds are so narrowly focused that the securities they need are being overbought.

This leaves investor money on the sideline, the exact place that it was before but no longer is. So fund managers are beginning to, at least temporarily close some of the hottest funds with the best year-to-date or quarterly returns. While this doesn't have any effect on shareholders currently in the fund, the problem of a deluge of new investors does not go away; it simply goes somewhere else.

This is especially problematic in the case of bond funds. Chasing performance while eluding risk is what bond investors have always sought. That and a return of their investment. Unless you own individual bonds, and plan on holding them to maturity, you may be unwittingly facing the same problem that mutual fund bondholders might be facing. Credit markets are still tight, the dollar is still weak and the economy has not yet fully embraced the enthusiasm of the stock markets. This makes bonds risky and increases the chances of default (which you will see in the increased yields).

When Fools Rush In
Overexposure and increased investments push bond prices higher and make profitable yields harder to find. This in itself, creates risk that many conservative and asset protection minded investors may not be willing to (or knowingly) assume.

At the same time, an opposite problem is looming for fixed income investors. Bonds are poised for difficulties in the coming years as inflation begins to rear its ugly head and deficit spending, necessary to facilitate the recovery begins to whittle away the current returns. For these investors, what would seem like a win-win situation might turn out to be something entirely the opposite.

Balanced funds and lifecycle funds may also be facing similar dangers as they try to increase bond exposure over time but are finding the endeavor more expensive than they would like. With fewer desirable bonds to purchase, these managers may be left with taking on more risk than the stocks in their portfolio have.

This imbalance could lead to more problems in the near term as investors seek out underinvested corners of the marketplace. The return chaser will simply head (or better, herd) for whatever is available. And a new cycle begins. Despite whatever notion of moving to a lower risk portfolio might provide, long-term investing still points to stocks as a safer haven. Which stocks is open for debate and future market gyrations. Yet, as fixed income portfolio managers try and warn their shareholders that this recovery is unlike any other, those looking for the safest of havens might not find what they are looking for in bond funds.

By Paul Petillo
Managing Editor
http://bluecollardollar.com

Paul Petillo is the Managing Editor of the http://bluecollardollar.com and the author of several books on personal finance including "Building Wealth in a Paycheck-to-Paycheck World" (McGraw-Hill 2004) and "Investing for the Utterly Confused (McGraw-Hill 2007). He can be reached for comment via: editor@bluecollardollar.com

Paul Petillo Archive

© 2005-2012 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




Commenting Issue - If on submitting you are returned to the main Index Page (50% chance) then your comment has not been accepted, Follow below steps for 95% chance of comment being accepted.

  1. Click your browser Back button (from main index page).
  2. COPY your comment text from Comment box (i.e. copy to clipboard).
  3. Press PAGE Refresh - You should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation"
  4. Paste your comment back into the comment text box.
  5. Click Submit - If everything goes okay you will remain on the article page with the message "Your comment was held for moderation and will be reviewed shortly".
  6. If instead you are again returned to the main index page then repeat 1-5, alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book