Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Unit trust investors favour interest-bearing funds

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funds R26.8bn, and South African multi-asset income funds R21.2bn.

Sunette Mulder, the senior policy adviser at Asisa, says judging from the 2017 statistics, already-cautious investors seem to have retreated from low- and medium-equity portfolios to the perceived safety of interest-bearing portfolios.

More resilient investors, on the other hand, sought the potential of higher returns typically offered by equity funds. South African multiasset high-equity funds attracted net inflows in 2017 of R20.4bn and South African equity general portfolios R13.3bn.

Mulder says that portfolios with high equity exposure, on average, consistent­ly outperform­ed (net of fees) interest-bearing portfolios over one year, five years, 10 years and 20 years to the end of December 2017.

The net inflow figure is the difference between the total amount of money invested into funds over a specific period minus repurchase­s (when units are sold).

The 2017 net inflows of R134.5bn were made up of new investment­s and income distributi­ons reinvested by investors.

Mulder says 28% of the inflows in 2017 came directly from investors – down by 3% from 2016. However, this does not mean that these investors acted without advice, she says. Intermedia­ries contribute­d 30% of new inflows, compared with 22% in 2016. Linked-investment services providers generated 22% of sales (20% in 2016) and institutio­nal investors, such as pension and provident funds, contribute­d 20% (27% in 2016).

At the end of December 2017, South African investors had a choice of 1 626 domestic funds – an increase of 106 funds from the previous year. There are also 433 locally registered foreign funds available to South African investors. These foreign funds recorded net inflows of R5.9bn over the 12 months to the end of 2017. – Staff Reporter

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