Mon, May 28, 2012, 7:52 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Why Investors Are Dumping Stock Funds for ETFs

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SymbolPriceChange
^GSPC1,317.81995-2.86
EMCAX26.09-0.02

Those billions flying out of mutual funds this year are finding a home in exchange-traded funds, where they're riding a rally and fueling a trend that market pros say is here to stay.

ETFs have gathered $8.3 billion in new funds so far in 2012, while their actively managed cousins have seen nearly identical outflows of $7.9 billion.

Though one of the main investing themes this year is a clear rotation away from the things that worked in 2011 and towards the things that didn't work, the trend toward index funds has continued unabated, propelled especially by the market's mostly straight-line path higher.

"This is really about the clients being aware of cost efficiencies," says Julie Casserly, president of JMC Wealth Management in Chicago. "They average investor is not going to like ETFs when the markets tank, and they're going to think they're the best thing since sliced bread when the market's going up."

Tuesday's stock market decline notwithstanding, the market rally that began in October has only helped fuel the ETF trade. The 1,415 U.S.-based funds now boast $1.18 trillion in assets, up more than 11 percent just since January, according to XTF Rating Service.

Most recently, Pimco announced that it is coming out with an ETF in March that tracks its Total Return Fund, the largest bond fund in the world.

There are plenty of factors that make ETFs attractive.

They are composed much like mutual funds but trade like stocks. For the most part, they track indexes like the Standard & Poor's 500 (INDEX: ^GSPC - News) or the Nasdaq (NASDAQ: COMP), as well as numerous sectors, industries and commodities, with gold a particularly attractive ETF class.

They also can be considerably cheaper and more advantageous from a tax perspective.

"There are so many mutual fund companies out there that are definitely higher-cost than ETFs," Casserly says. "If you're going to invest your money in a strategic manner - meaning you're going to ride the market up and down - money managers aren't adding any value and ETFs are definitely the most effective way from a cost-effectiveness perspective."

To be sure, mutual funds have their advantages, and they're certainly not going anywhere.

Mutual funds boast more than $16 trillion in assets, and active managers help provide expertise and flexibility to investors that they can't always get through indexes.

But active managers have been having a miserable time of it lately, with just one in four beating their benchmarks during the market's relatively flat year in 2011. That has only fueled investor interest in ETFs.

"In the ETF world you can be in any sector at any point. You can now invest more like institutions," says Nadav Baum, executive vice president at BPU Investment Management in Pittsburgh, Pa. "Prior to this big explosion, retail investors couldn't invest that way."

There are knocks against them, though.

Because they are fairly static instruments tied to indexes, the diversification they seek to provide also can prove a drag if a large company or two in the underlying components is performing badly.

Perhaps even more so, the industry has seen an explosion of double- and triple-leveraged funds that use derivatives and are designed to hedge against risk, but which also can exacerbate the chances for trouble. Some even blame ETFs for the May 6, 2010 "flash crash" when the Dow industrials lost nearly a thousand points in a few minutes.

"We think ETFs can play a very important role in portfolios. They're a very cost-effective way of getting broad exposure to segments of the market," says Beth Larson, principal at Evermay Wealth Management in Washington, D.C. "What we don't subscribe to is using ETFs that are targeting what we might refer to as fictitious indexes that are designed just to develop an ETF."

Marc Coffelt, who runs a mid-cap mutual fund as president of Empiric Advisors, believes there always will be a place for his work despite soaring ETF popularity.

"The advantage of active management is you have someone really doing the selection," says Coffelt, whose fund is the Empiric Core Equity Fund (NASDAQ: EMCAX - News), rated two stars by Morningstar. "To know what sector to go into and to choose that sector just based on price momentum over some period - ultimately that is going to prove to be pretty dangerous."

But for whatever weaknesses they may have, ETFs are likely to continue to be a popular investing tool and a key to determining market direction.

"Some of the commentary surrounding these products has made them sound like the hoof beats which precede the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse," said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx in New York. "But for 2012, you can just as accurately call them the most visible source of capital to help U.S. stocks and other risk assets higher."



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  • Bob M  •  3 months ago
    Hysterical. A two star fund manager who sees big problems with ETF's Surprise, surprise. lol. I swear I don't undestand why people pay for management or for full service brokers anymore. Open an account at a discount broker, buy large cap dividend paying stocks and some broad based index ETFs and you're done. Save yourself thousands in fees. I've done just fine. Better than many pros who think you have to trade in and out all the time.
  • BearMountainBooks  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Well the average investor isn't going to like any investment when the market goes down--including 99 percent of mutual (managed) funds. It isn't like all the mutual fund managers get clever just in time and pull the money out of the market. You lose money in both if you're in either. The ETFs are more cost effective and *I* can get out of them anytime I want--middle of the day, morning or afternoon.
    • It 3 months ago
      And you can use options as insurance.
    • Jeffrey 3 months ago
      Not really true. There are mutuals that gain value, or some value when shares decline in price.
    • Brian 3 months ago
      Options are not insurance but a hedge. Insurance is a promise to pay the insured back in full. Not the same thing
  • jennifer  •  3 months ago
    "The advantage of active management is you have someone really doing the selection," says Coffelt, whose fund is the Empiric Core Equity Fund (NASDAQ: EMCAX - News), rated two stars by Morningstar. "To know what sector to go into and to choose that sector just based on price momentum over some period - ultimately that is going to prove to be pretty dangerous."

    Compare Coffelt's fund with IWR, the mid-cap index. His fund has either underperformed or tracked the index. My question to you is, is this guy worth a 1.72% expense ratio? IWR's exp ratio is 20bps. That's about 85% less expensive for a better return.
    • 1980's Boingo Man 3 months ago
      Mr. Coffelt, that is also the disadvantage of having active managmement: Someone really doing the selection.
    • Anon 3 months ago
      Index ETFs are the only way to invest, unless you are a crony capitalist like Warren Buffett
  • Jim and Mary  •  Bend, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    I don't understand why I won't like my ETF's when the market tanks. I thought the opposite was true since I can attach stop-loss orders to my ETF's. I can't do that with my mutual funds. Can somebody explain.
    • ps2alumnus 3 months ago
      I think the writer just means the ETFs will fall inline with the market since they track certain indexes. With active management, you could theoretically outperform the decline... though in reality that's often not the case.
    • scottw 3 months ago
      Jim, I think they meant you won't like them if you HOLD ON TO THEM when the market tanks. Yes, you certainly can cut them loose. As another poster said, they BOTH stink if you hold on to them in a decline.
    • TJK 3 months ago
      Jim and Mary,
      You're right. Julie Casserly runs mutual funds what would you expect her to say. If I could find a fund that beats the market, i'd buy it. Until then they are not worth the fees, capital gains, restrictions, etc.
  • TJK  •  3 months ago
    Only one in 4 managers beat their index? That's worse than a coin toss, I'll stick to my ETF's
    • d 3 months ago
      Easier to just buy a few ETF's and letem' ride. Easiest way to make money on the street.
    • Conservative 3 months ago
      Of all of the mutual funds that I have held with Fidelity, American/Century, InvestcoAm etc. none of them have helped me a bit in a down market, whether it was Oct 87 crash, the Tech bubble crash in 2000/2001 or the finiancial crash in 2008. The managers do not try to time the market. Holding thru the 87 and the 08 has made my money back, but what I lost in the 00/01 tech crash never came back. The tech stocks went crazy asymtopic the way gold looks now.
    • underwatervulcan 3 months ago
      What kind of funds are you guys buying? If I'm putting money in an Mutual Fund it better be actively managed and not stuck to mimicking an index. Maybe with exception to Vanguard because their fees are so low, but if you are just tracking the S&P or mid cap s&p go get an ETF. If you are investing in future biotechnology stocks go get an expensive mutual fund.
  • Alf  •  San Francisco, California  •  3 months ago
    ETFs are more cost effective.
  • Fred  •  3 months ago
    "They average investor is not going to like ETFs when the markets tank, and they're going to think they're the best thing since sliced bread when the market's going up."

    They've been saying that since the beginning of ETFs, but the truth is that mutual funds have always underperformed in good markets and bad. I won't be buying any mutual funds any time soon. Go VTI and VWO!!!
  • mmatski  •  3 months ago
    90% of people work for a living and don't have time to trade the markets.
  • John  •  Detroit, Michigan  •  3 months ago
    "They average investor is not going to like ETFs when the markets tank, and they're going to think they're the best thing since sliced bread when the market's going up."

    This statement is utterly false. ETFs are typically more diversifed than mutual funds and can withstand a market downturn much better. On the contrary, if you can find a good mutual fund, they usually outperform the market relative to ETFs in a market upturn.

    This article needs to get a few things corrected. The cost efficiencies points are true; they are cheaper than mutual funds. Sometimes a really good, proven, winning fund manager is worth the extra cost. It's not always JUST about cost. That would be close-minded to simply think about cost and that's it.
  • Marc  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    So.. ETF's are better than low-cost index funds, like Vanguard's offerings? Or, are they just better than expensive, actively managed, funds? I wasn't clear on that point. This guy, for one, lost his faith in actively managed funds a good 15 years ago.
  • Money  •  3 months ago
    Mutual funds... so 1999. Why pay a fee and get hosed at the same time when you can buy a long or short etf and try to make some money.
  • ICU  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    I have worked and been around portfolio managers all my professional life and their performance does not justify the cost vs those of ETFs. By the way, there are hidden fees/costs in mutual funds that are not disclosed. For example, managers buy research with soft dollars. That is, for obtaining so called free research from a dealer they buy financial assets from those dealers at the asking price. Do you see how fees/costs can be hidden? Where there is pretty women, money, power there is always someone that figures out how to get a leg up.......What Wall Street tells you and what they do, can and often is different. The best way to invest is to buy at significant support levels and sell at significant resistance levels. That is what professionals do and that is the reason that all previous support and resistance levels are revisited and tested. The average investor can do the same and better than a portfolio manager that has to deals with millions of shares. By looking at support and resistance, money flows and insider's activity the regular investors can do as well if not better than a portfolio manager.
  • RICHARDR  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Most 401k and 457b plans only have a limited number of mutual funds to choose from. If you could get the benefit of tax deferral and low cost on some ETF choices, that would be great for the investor whose main money is in work related accounts.
  • MarkW  •  3 months ago
    Wherever the Mob goes, I go opposite. Can't wait for the articles titled, "How I lost all my money in the ETF market." By line will state, "And they told me I would make more money this way......"
  • ThomasO  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    If you made a lot of dumb mistakes in the market in the past 15 years, you'll probably continue to make dumb mistakes even if you switch to ETFs.
  • DanD  •  Cicero, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    The ETFs will perform better in sideways and down markets. Use proper allocations among different asset classes icluding the bond ETFs and you'll be fine.
  • Billy Jiggs  •  3 months ago
    Funny that the article attaches value to the "expertise of a fund manager" while at the same time acknowledging that the vast majority of them can't even out-perform the S&P index.

    Unless you like giving money away for no reason, stick with well-diversified ETFs.
  • Bobby  •  Cumming, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    I have a mix of both funds and ETF's I have a clue for our expert, when the market tanks they both suck the big one. Unless it's a very conservative fund, in a down market a managed fund doesn't do much better if at all from the ETF.
  • George  •  3 months ago
    Again this is only for the ones that take the time to learn, imagine this being offered in a 401k or 403b or whatever else and next we know thousands are losing millions. Lawsuits galore, we read about suits all of the time, the investors were misled.

    It happens every down market, even markets going up, people are lazy yet greedy and expect everything to be done for them.

    My only wish is I had the option of doing what I want with my 401k and being forced to choose between 2nd rated funds. In reality the fund managers still get a decent paycheck no matter what the fund does....
  • Mark  •  Englewood, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    Active managers are paid too much....pretty simple. Management fees should go down owns AUMs increase. They shouldn't stay flat.
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