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Diana Britton, Managing Editor

February 26, 2013

1 Min Read
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The stampede from U.S. equity mutual funds and the accompanying positive S&P 500 performance over the last few years is eerily similar to the late 1970s’ bull market, a new report by The Leuthold Group says. And if history is any indication, the recent inflows into these funds this year could be followed by a large market decline. According to Leuthold, after a 50 percent market decline into the September 1974 low, the S&P rose 121 percent to a November 1980 cyclical high. Only 15 of those 74 months saw positive inflows into domestic equity funds. But after investors poured $500 million (a lot at that time) into these funds in November 1980, the S&P took a 27 percent dive. After a 57 percent decline into the March 2009 low, the S&P gained 121 percent, while investors yanked money out of equity mutual funds for 38 months out of 47. But in January 2013, investors poured $22 billion into these funds, the first month of inflows since April 2011. Sound familiar? “While thoughts of hundreds of billions switching from bonds to stocks in a ‘Great Rotation’ makes for great sell-side storytelling, history doesn’t support the public’s ability to pull it off,” says Doug Ramsey, chief investment officer of The Leuthold Group.

About the Author

Diana Britton

Managing Editor, WealthManagement.com

Diana Britton is the Managing Editor of WealthManagement.com, covering covering independent broker/dealers and RIAs from all angles. She's also the host of The Healthy Advisor, a podcast focused on advisor health and wellbeing. A native of Los Angeles, she now lives in Rocklin, Calif.