A B-D's multi-manaer mutual fund arm kept the inflows lead proportionately again last month, even as the industry's overall outflows returned.
| Ryan Timothy Robson Edward Jones / Olive Street Investment Advisers, LLC Principal, Client Strategy Group / President | |
This article draws from
Morningstar Direct data on May 2023 open-end mutual fund and ETF flows, excluding money-market funds and funds of funds. (Other asset management products, like CITs and SMAs, are also not included.)
Edward Jones' Bridge Builder led the pack for a third month in a row, thanks to an estimated $178 million per fund in net May 2023 inflows, up month-over-month from $58 million per fund in
April 2023 and up year-over-year from $6 million per fund in net outflows in
May 2022. Other big May 2023 inflows winners included:
SSGA, $59 million per fund (up M/M from $17 million per fund, up Y/Y from $27 million per fund);
Independent Franchise Partners, $50 million per fund (up M/M from $1 million per fund, up Y/Y from $18 million per fund);
Axonic, $33 million per fund (up M/M from $7 million per fund, up Y/Y from $20 million per fund); and
Standpoint Asset Management, $29 million per fund (up M/M from $5 million per fund, down Y/Y from $37 million per fund).
Bridge Builder also still leads the 2023 proportional inflows pack so far, thanks to estimated net year-to-date inflows of $514 million per fund as of May 31. Other big YTD inflows winners include:
Kovitz, $154 million per fund; and
Baird (including Strategas), $117 million per fund.
On the flip side,
Edgewood took the outflows lead last month, thanks to an estimated $86 million per fund in net May 2023 outflows, up M/M from $49 million per fund in April 2023 but down Y/Y from $147 million per fund in May 2022. Other big May 2023 outflows sufferers included:
Primecap, $66 million per fund (up M/M from $40 million per fund, down Y/Y from $189 million per fund);
Akre, $58 million per fund (up M/M from $46 million per fund, down Y/Y from $83 million per fund);
Ruane Cunniff & Goldfarb's Sequoia, $51 million per fund (up M/M from $34 million per fund, up Y/Y from $37 million per fund); and
Core Alternative Capital, $37 million per fund (up M/M from $12 million per fund, down Y/Y from $9 million per fund in net inflows).
Edgewood still leads the 2023 proportional outflows pack so far, thanks to an estimated $321 million per fund in YTD outflows as of May 31. Other big outflows sufferers include:
PGIM, $314 million per fund; and Primecap, $296 million per fund.
The whole long-term U.S. mutual fund and ETF industry suffered $552,000 per fund in net May 2023 outflows. That's down M/M from $156,000 per fund in April 2023 inflows and down Y/Y from $930,000 per fund in May 2022 outflows.
So far in 2023, the industry has suffered $5,000 per fund in net outflows. 
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