7.31.2010

Shunning equity?

From Friday's Wall Street Journal:
By KEVIN KINGSBURY And JOHN KELL

Money returned to long-term U.S. mutual funds last month after investors pulled holdings out in May in the wake of the stock market's "flash crash," the Investment Company Institute said in data released Thursday.

In stock funds, more money continued to be pulled than was added, continuing a trend in which investors haven't consistently added to stock funds even since the market bottomed in March 2009. Outflows, or selling, dropped to $5.41 billion in June from $24.76 billion a month earlier as money leaving domestic funds last month more than offset net inflows to those that primarily invest overseas.

Instead, the bulk of cash going to mutual funds since then has been bond funds. In June, they received a net $20.74 billion, said the industry group, up from $14.54 billion in May. They rose 58% for taxable funds to $18.79 billion but dropped 27% for municipal-bond funds.

Money continues to flow from money-market funds as interest rates for such instruments remain near zero. Outflows rose to $24.15 billion from $22.16 billion, putting the first half's total at $509.27 billion, said the ICI. That compares with outflows of $189.37 billion in the first half of 2009.

Meanwhile, for the latest week, assets in money-market funds jumped $3.57 billion as inflows into institutional funds more than offset a decrease in retail funds, according to the ICI.

For the week ended Wednesday, total fund assets grew to $2.802 trillion, according to the ICI. Earlier this year, the total funds tracked by the ICI dropped below $3 trillion for the first time since October 2007.

Retail funds decreased $2.37 billion, to $980.36 billion in the latest week. Taxable government funds saw $990 million of inflows, putting assets at $173.58 billion, while nongovernment funds had $1.86 billion of outflows, lowering the money in them to $597.07 billion. Tax-exempt funds declined $1.5 billion to $209.71 billion.

Assets in the institutional class were up $5.94 billion to $1.821 trillion. Taxable government funds had $10 million of outflows, putting asset levels at $662.88 billion. Nongovernment funds had inflows of $7.56 billion, moving their assets up to $1.025 trillion. Tax-exempt funds had outflows of $1.62 billion, falling to $133.27 billion.
The original article

Performance YTD 2010


This is a chart of everything I've held in 2010. Everything I have in my portfolio I was holding on January 1st, except for Verizon. I didn't buy that until March. I've also put additional funds into some of these stocks (AgFeed and Verizon) during the year.

I only have one winner: VMWare. I still don't REALLY understand what they do. I don't need to, apparently. I'm completely emotionally invested in AgFeed. I'll hold it forever if I need to. That breaks two of Jim Cramer's rules. I shouldn't be emotionally invested in any of these stocks and I'm not supposed to throw good money after bad. Take a look at its performance: it's awful! It's lost almost half of its value since January 1st, and I ADDED money to it! What a moron! But I keep going back to the 10Ks and 10Qs and I get excited every time. This stock is going to go stratospheric. I can feel it. All signs point to no, however.

7.26.2010

Portfolio Change

Added some money to my brokerage account. Spent half of it on additional shares of Verizon and I'm keeping the rest in cash.

Verizon ---------------- 24.31%
MGM Resorts -------- 24.07%
AgFeed Industries --- 22.19%
VMWare -------------- 14.48%
Cash -------------------- 11.66%
Bank of America ------- 3.29%