Fidelity Investments and some other U.S. asset managers with big money market funds can breathe a sigh of relief.
Boston-based data provider Financial Research Corp. (FRC) has decided to stop providing fund flows data to the media that identifies companies by name — figures that while closely watched were a source of constant irritation to some firms.
News reports based on the monthly data by FRC, part of Citigroup, had rankled Fidelity and some other fund companies because the figures excluded money market fund flows and only included flows of stock and bond funds.
Over the past few years, Fidelity and other asset managers reported robust inflows into money market funds but received bad press because the FRC data excluded those figures.
For example, FRC numbers showed that Fidelity saw outflows of $9.9 billion in January.
But the world’s biggest mutual fund company reported inflows of $14.4 billion that month, driven by money market fund inflows of $20.3 billion.
That nuance was often lost in headlines focusing on FRC’s bond and stock fund flow data — figures that had become industry benchmarks.
Putnam Investments, the Boston-based unit of Canada’s Power Financial Corp, has regularly topped FRC’s list of companies seeing the biggest outflows.
FRC may provide the firmwise data to companies as a paid service.
Other companies which track fund flows include Strategic Insight, Emerging Portfolio Fund Research and Lipper Inc, a unit of Thomson Reuters.
Photo credit: Reuters


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