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960428
Fidelity sees net
investments in
stock funds slowing
BOSTON: Fidelity Investments, the nation's largest mutual fund company, predicted Friday that net investments in its domestic stock funds had slowed for the third consecutive month in April.
Net cash inflows into equity funds are expected to total slightly more than $2 billion in April, down from just over $3 billion in March and $4 billion in February, the company said.
As much as $5.3 billion flowed into the funds in January, said Robyn Tice, a spokeswoman for Fidelity.
Net cash inflow, which measures new investments minus redemptions, is a common barometer of demand for mutual funds.
"Our domestic equity sales slowed slightly in April. We're still seeing a reaction to the market volatility, Tice said.
Tice said investors poured money into stock funds for their individual retirement acounts during the first three months of the year ahead of the mid-April tax deadline. January's strong sales were well above the more than $3.3 billion in domestic inflows into stock funds in November and December.
But the dropoff at Fidelity exceeded a general decline in the industry over the first three months of the year, according to an industry report.
The Investment Company Institute, an industry group, said that cash inflows in domestic stock funds slipped marginally in March to $17.25 billion from $17.53 billion in February.
Charles Biderman, the president of Liquidity Trim Tabs, which tracks cash flows, said the downturn in Fidelity's sales may reflect some of its funds' poor performance.
"Fidelity's large funds are underperforming the market and investors are looking around at other funds," he said.
Fidelity's Magellan Fund, the largest fund in the country with more than $53 billion in assets, has returned just 2.83 percent.-Reuter
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