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Wednesday, January 30, 2013 Three Things To Know About Waddell & Reed's Earnings Yesterday Waddell & Reed [profile] reported fourth quarter growth in earnings and assets under management, despite slight outflows [see Waddell's Q4 earnings report]. For the quarter ended December 31, 2012, the Overland Park, Kansas-based parent of Ivy Funds [profile] earned $52.4 million from continuing operations or $0.61 per diluted share, up from $39.4 million and $0.46 in Q4 2011 and $52.1 million and $0.61 in Q3 2012. That $0.61 per diluted share surpassed analysts' estimates of $0.58, Reuters reported. Waddell & Reed's AUM on December 31, 2012 was $96.4 billion, up two percent from September 30, 2012 and 16 percent from December 31, 2011. AUM rose despite net outflows of $165 million for the quarter. The Kansas City Business Journal, Kansas City Star and MarketWatch all covered Waddell's earnings. And now Goldman Sachs has reportedly upgraded Waddell from Sell to Neutral. If you look at Waddell's earnings report and the SeekingAlpha transcript of the earnings call yesterday morning, you'd notice three takeaways. POINT #1: Q4 Net Outflows Were Probably Just a Blip POINT #2: Sales Growth is Strong Across Asset Classes POINT #3: Waddell's Captive Advisor Force Will Expand a Bit Now to elaborate on those points: POINT #1: Q4 Net Outflows Were Probably Just a Blip During the conference call, Waddell chairman and CEO Hank Hermann commented on the slight net outflows, despite strong sales, across Waddell's three channels. He pointed to the fiscal cliff and fears over possible changing tax rates as possible drivers of those outflows. "Redemptions increased in what appeared to be a year-end push by investors by locking capital gains prior to the much anticipated rise in tax rates," Hermann said, according to the transcript, pointing to both Waddell's captive advisor channel and its wholesale channel (which involves through retirement plans, RIAs and other broker-dealers). Net outflows for Q4 were $165 million, compared to $5.1 billion of sales. And Hermann said that the outflows have already more than reversed. It should be noted that January to date has seen a meaningful moderation in redemptions and a sharp improvement in sales volume. At this time, it is still too early to tell how sustainable the improvement is. Printed from: MFWire.com/story.asp?s=42851 Copyright 2013, InvestmentWires, Inc. All Rights Reserved |