January was a cruel month for active equity mutual funds. Despite a mostly strong month following a boffo 2019, they suffered their worst monthly outflows since the financial crisis and their biggest January outflows ever, according to Investment Company Institute data.
An estimated $46 billion in net outflows from actively managed equity mutual funds was recorded for January following $362 billion in net outflows for last year.
"The outflows are credit negative" for active asset managers because they lower the assets under management (AUM) base on which the firms generate revenues and indicate a lack of client demand and loss of relevance with clients," said Stephen Tu, a Moody's vice president, in a statement.
The January outflows were especially surprising because investors are usually willing to overlook the higher relative fees of actively managed funds when markets are strong, according to Moody's.
Investors are apparently favoring lower fee equity index mutual funds and ETFs, which are also predominantly passive investments. In 2019, those funds attracted net inflows of $162 million last year but passive and active bond funds saw record net inflows of $457 billion. About two-thirds flowed into active bond funds.