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Mutual funds vanishing at record rate
USA Today/Yahoo ^ | Mon Sep 9, 7:18 AM ET | John Waggoner

Posted on 09/09/2002 8:11:39 AM PDT by arete

A record number of mutual funds are headed in a new direction: oblivion.

Since the bear market began in March 2000, 414 stock mutual funds have been liquidated, says Morningstar, the mutual fund tracker. That's half the liquidations in its database, which stretches back dozens of years and covers 4,074 stock funds. An additional 566 stock funds merged into other funds.

The number grows if you count different share classes for the same funds. Many funds issue multiple share classes, which give investors several different ways to pay sales commissions on their funds. Using that methodology, 1,741 stock funds have been merged or liquidated vs. 1,672 before the bear market began. Of course, since 1990, the number of funds has quadrupled.

If there's not enough interest from investors, a fund will liquidate -- sell all its holdings and distribute the proceeds to investors. More often, funds merge with a more successful fund. Either way, its record vanishes. Why funds wither:

* Failed concepts. Members of StockJungle.com picked the stocks for the Internet site's Community Intelligence fund. The fund folded in August 2001 after falling 42% the previous 12 months.

* Tiny sectors. As the technology stock bubble expanded, fund companies sliced the tech sector thinner -- too thin, sometimes. Example: Turner Wireless and Communication fund, which merged into Turner New Enterprise, a diversified fund. Turner Wireless had fallen 81% in its last 12 months.

* Bad sellers. In this bear market, investors want conservative funds. Riskier funds have wilted. For example, Federated Aggressive Growth fund, born in the boom days of November 1996, folded into Federated Kaufmann fund on May 17. Federated Aggressive Growth fell 22% in its last 12 months.

As fund growth has slowed, small and midsize fund companies are being bought out. ''It's not the tremendous growth business it used to be,'' says Scott Cooley, senior analyst at Morningstar.

When two fund companies merge, they often have duplicate funds. Reducing extra funds saves administrative costs, says Jim Tambone, co-president of Liberty Funds Distributor. Liberty, which owns Stein Roe, Acorn and Newport funds, will merge 21 funds in November.

Bond funds have been a big victim of fund mergers. Morningstar says 584 bond funds have merged or liquidated since March 2000.

New funds bring creativity to the investment arena, says Roy Weitz, editor of FundAlarm, an Internet site. Dead funds are a natural part of that cycle, like trees that decompose on the forest floor, he says. But there's one big difference: ''Some human thinks up the fund and then has to kill them.''


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: economy; gold; investing; mutualfunds; silver; stockmarket
FYI

Comments and opinions welcome.

Richard W.

1 posted on 09/09/2002 8:11:39 AM PDT by arete
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To: arete
Since the bear market began in March 2000...

Which means it started when Bush became president, right Dems?

2 posted on 09/09/2002 8:15:58 AM PDT by Balto_Boy
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To: arete
'morning Richard. Just taking a little break before the 1pm trading machines hit.

This is just axiomatic with the flight of funds from funds. Underlying theme is, the cornucopia of different themes that a fund can come up with to attract and keep funds is dwindling. Not too many old or new marketing ploys left that are having any effect gathering in and keeping the type of investor who feels he needs to be in the market but also needs someone to do all the work for him. Just being able to say you're in the market is no longer the regular sheik thing to be doing in the regular publics point of view any more.
3 posted on 09/09/2002 9:32:02 AM PDT by imawit
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To: arete
Not only that, a lot of the funds were just pretty packages, or just felt right. The basic, performance just wasn't there. A lot of dollars are finding it very expensive to be a member of "we are the niche that sounds good to you" with no return or benefit.
4 posted on 09/09/2002 9:38:11 AM PDT by imawit
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To: arete
In other words, we now have record survivor bias in reported mutual fund returns. :)
5 posted on 09/09/2002 10:16:09 AM PDT by Tauzero
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To: imawit
Man! It is really quiet out there. More action from the birds in the yard. Think I'll go to the office early.

It is so bad that I bet you can pick any index stock and see the buying machine. It's that spike that's the 10x volume spike out of the noise around 1pm. The market is just relegated to the non-emotional robots today. If someone throws a party, no one's going to show up no matter what.
6 posted on 09/09/2002 10:21:41 AM PDT by imawit
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To: Tauzero
nother way to put it. Hey, thanks for the post, I thought I was just talking to myself and arete.
7 posted on 09/09/2002 10:23:25 AM PDT by imawit
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To: Tauzero
In other words, we now have record survivor bias in reported mutual fund returns. :)

I assume from your smile, that you recognize that that has always been the case. After all, they tell you that "past performance is no guarantee..." then the whole pitch talks about how great past performance was. Better that they be required to report the truth:

"Past performance is no INDICATION, WHATSOEVER, of future performance."

If it were, it sure would be a simple game!

8 posted on 09/09/2002 11:18:04 AM PDT by Deuce
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