Year-End Rotation Into Out-Of-Favor Issues?

 | Jan 10, 2021 12:42AM ET

Despite a horrible first quarter in 2020, when the average equity and fixed income fund (including ETFs) lost 22.33% and 4.56%, respectively, both asset classes were able to finish the year on strong footing, posting one-year returns of 15.63% and 5.28%, respectively. Even the average mixed-asset (target date and target risk) fund managed to put together a handsome 12.26% one-year return. Not bad considering the ground that needed to be retraced before the funds could move into positive territory.

However, there is still a ton of cash sitting on the sidelines, waiting for the other proverbial shoe to drop. By December 31, 2020, estimated net flows into U.S. domiciled money market funds had reached $653.9 billion (based on preliminary year-end numbers), down from the $1.120 trillion pinnacle reached in May.

Conventional fund investors appeared to shrug off the strong rebound in equities, redeeming a net $532.6 billion during 2020, with conventional large-cap funds (-$295.1 billion) suffering the largest exodus (in spite of the average large-cap fund returning 21.78% for the year), bettered by international income funds (-$119.6 billion) and small-cap funds (-$32.3 billion). Conventional fixed income funds continued to attract net new money during 2020, with taxable bond funds taking in $105.6 billion and tax-exempt bond funds attracting some $26.9 billion.