andy zipper (andy.zipper@enron.com) has sent you a news article 

Personal message: 

Stilwell Lost $1.7 Billion/Day in Nov.
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20001201/bs/fund_stilwell_dc_1.html 

Stilwell Lost $1.7 Billion/Day in Nov. 
Yahoo! News	Home - Yahoo! - My Yahoo! - News Alerts - Help
	
		 Reuters  Media


	


	
	
	Home?
	Top?Stories?
	?Business?
	?Tech
	?Politics
	?World
	?Local
	?Entertainment
	?Sports
	?Science
	?Health
	?Full?Coverage
	
	
	
	
	

Business News  - updated 6:45 PM ET Dec 1 	
	
	MyAdd to My Yahoo!
	
	Reuters ?| ?AP ?| ?Motley?Fool ?| ?TheStreet.com ?| ?Industry?Standard ?| ?
Individual?Investor ?| ?[IMAGE]Videos ? | More ... 














 Related?Quotes 
SV
DJIA
IIX?NASDAQ?PSE
S?500

35 5/16
10373.54
323.07
2645.29
830.31
1315.23

+2 13/16
-40.95
+7.66
+47.36
+18.28
+0.28


delayed 20 mins - disclaimer 






Friday December  1  4:59 PM ET
Stilwell Lost $1.7 Billion/Day in Nov.Stilwell Lost $1.7 Billion/Day in Nov. 

By Christopher Noble

BOSTON (Reuters) - Janus Capital's parent, Stilwell Financial Inc. (NYSE:SV - 
news), saw its assets shrink nearly $2 billion a day in November as the 
hottest technology fund firm of the 1990s was hit by sharp market declines.

Stilwell reported on Friday it had $262 billion under management at the end 
of November -- a $38 billion plunge from the $300 billion at the end of 
October. That works out to a huge $1.73 billion for each trading day, most of 
it directly from Janus, which is 82.5 percent owned by Stilwell.

Much of the shrinkage is attributable to the dizzying drop of the Nasdaq, 
which logged a 23 percent decline in November, its second-worst fall ever. 
Only October 1987, the month of the stock market crash when Nasdaq lost 27 
percent, was worse.

The Dow Jones Industrial average, with much less exposure to technology, fell 
only 5.1 percent in November.

``The decline in assets under management has infinitely more to do with 
market depreciation than it does with investor redemptions,'' said Jane 
Ingalls, spokeswoman for Janus.

She declined to give specific figures for monthly net cash flow, but said 
November was shaping up much like September and October, when redemptions 
from Janus retail funds were offset by inflows through its institutional 
channels.

``We were very squarely positive in September,'' she said. ''In October, we 
had modest outflows on the retail side, but they were offset almost entirely 
by institutional flows.''

Janus had retail outflows of $772 million in October after September net 
redemptions of $46 million. September was the first time since December 1997 
that Janus had net outflows.

``For November, it is still a little early to tell,'' she said. ``But again, 
it's looking like modest outflows on the retail side and either flat or 
slightly negative on the institutional side.''

A shrinking asset base is just the latest bump in the road the once sleepy 
fund firm traveled in the 1990s. It has endured an acrimonious dispute with 
its former parent, Kansas City Southern Industries, over a spinoff plan and 
its funds have been punished as investors soured on the tech and growth 
sectors that are heavily favored by Janus portfolio managers.

Of Janus's 16 retail equity funds, 14 are in negative territory year-to-date 
and all of them lost ground in November, according to data from fund tracker 
Morningstar.

But recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web 
sites) show Janus has stuck with its investments and has not changed its 
investment style.

Stilwell also includes the Berger fund family, Nelson Money Managers Plc and 
a stake in DST Systems Inc.

Stilwell is not alone to suffer from investor hesitancy in recent months.

Preliminary estimates from TrimTabs, a firm that tracks money flowing in and 
out of the stock market, show $4.5 billion of new money flowed into mutual 
funds in November, the lowest figure for the year and the smallest since 
February 1999, when inflows were $758 million.

The estimate excludes activity on Nov. 30 and is based on actual data from 20 
percent of the industry. TrimTabs extrapolates overall flows from its sample.

The money still went heavily to technology and small capitalization funds, 
indicating a surprisingly resilient enthusiasm for the sectors, Wittnebert 
said.

``The thing the public is really afraid of is missing a resumption of the 
rally of the Nasdaq and another indication of that is the continuing outflow 
from bond funds,'' he said. 

Email this story?-?View most popular??|??Printer-friendly format



Archived Stories by Date:
Nov 30Nov 29Nov 28Nov 27Nov 26Nov 25Nov 24Nov 23Nov 22Nov 21Nov 20Nov 19Nov 
18Nov 17Nov 16Nov 15






News Resources
[IMAGE]
Message Boards: Post and read messages about this story
Requires a Yahoo! ID to post messages.
[IMAGE]
Conversations: View | Start a live discussion 
Requires Yahoo! Messenger





Search News
Advanced
Search:??Stories???Photos???Full Coverage







Home?
Top?Stories?
?Business?
?Tech
?Politics
?World
?Local
?Entertainment
?Sports
?Science
?Health
?Full?Coverage



 Copyright , 2000 Yahoo! Inc., and Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited 
without the prior written consent of Reuters.
Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for 
any actions taken in reliance thereon. Questions or Comments 
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service