Five firms accounted for more than 90 percent of all passive inflows last month among fund firms.
| Laurence D. "Larry" Fink BlackRock Chairman, CEO | |
This article draws from
Morningstar Direct data on June 2023 open-end mutual fund and ETF flows, excluding money-market funds and funds of funds. The data also excludes other asset management products, like CITs and SMAs.
J.P. Morgan (including Six Circles) led the active inflows pack for a second month in a row, thanks to an estimated $7.507 billion in June 2023 active inflows, up month-over-month from $5.508 billion in
May 2023 and up year-over-year from $240 million in
June 2022. Other big June 2023 active inflows winners included:
Baird (including Strategas), $1.924 billion (up M/M from $951 million, up Y/Y from $360 million in net outflows);
Empower, $605 million (up M/M from $90 million);
Guggenheim (including Rydex), $591 million (up M/M from $473 million, up Y/Y from $1.558 billion in net outflows); and
Simplify, $543 million (up M/M from $52 million, up Y/Y from $2 million in net outflows).
BlackRock (including iShares) took the lead on the passive side last month, thanks to an estimated $20.556 billion in net June 2023 passive inflows, up M/M from $513 million in May 2023 passive outflows and up Y/Y from $15.812 billion in June 2022 passive inflows. Other big June 2023 passive inflows winners included:
Vanguard, $19.973 billion (up M/M from $1.964 billion in net outflows, up Y/Y from $12.189 billion in net inflows);
Invesco, $7.947 billion (up M/M from $601 million, up Y/Y from $284 million);
Fidelity, $6.242 billion (up M/M from $5.21 billion, up Y/Y from $4.752 billion); and
SSGA, $5.948 billion (down M/M from $16.237 billion, up Y/Y from $5.996 billion in net outflows).
On the flip side, last month was another rough one for Vanguard's active funds, which led the active outflows pack for a second month in a row thanks to an estimated $7.495 billion in net June 2023 active outflows, down M/M from $8.574 billion in May 2023 outflows and down Y/Y from $8.415 billion in June 2022. Other big June 2023 active outflows sufferers included:
T. Rowe Price, $4.659 billion (down M/M from $5.133 billion, down Y/Y from $5.347 billion); Fidelity, $3.815 billion (down M/M from $5.354 billion, down Y/Y from $7.456 billion); BlackRock, $2.779 billion (down M/M from $4.118 billion, up Y/Y from $3.543 billion); and
Capital Group (home of
American Funds), $2.688 billion (down M/M from $5.419 billion, down Y/Y from $5.877 billion).
Empower took the outflows lead last month among passive fund firms, thanks to an estimated $386 million in net June 2023 oassive outflows, down M/M from $100 million in May 2023 inflows. Other big June 2023 passive outflows sufferers included:
DWS (including Xtrackers), $297 million (up M/M from $66 million, down Y/Y from $981 million in net outflows):
USCF, $272 million (down M/M from $166 million in net inflows, down Y/Y from $62 million in net inflows);
Voya, $263 million (down M/M from $249 million in net inflows, up Y/Y from $240 million in net outflows); and
Northern Trust (including Flexshares), $240 million (down M/M from $243 million, up Y/Y from $116 million).
Overall, the 714 active fund firms tracked by the M* team (down M/M from 717, down Y/Y from 731) suffered an estimated $31.238 billion in net active outflows in June 2023, down M/M from $44.016 billion in May 2023 and down Y/Y from $90.45 billion in June 2022. 260 of those firms (36.4 percent) brought in net active inflows last month, up M/M from 236 (32.9 percent) and up Y/Y from 257 (35.2 percent).
The 146 passive firms tracked by the M* team (down M/M from 147, down Y/Y from 159) brought in an estimated $67.267 billion in net June 2023 passive inflows, up M/M from $21.046 billion in May 2023 and up Y/Y from $29.219 billion in June 2022. 63 of those firms (43.2 percent) gained net passive inflows last month, up M/M from 59 (40.1 percent) but down Y/Y from 74 (46.5 percent). 
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