Bloomberg reported a striking shift in capital flows: roughly $1 trillion exited active equity mutual funds last year—the 11th consecutive year of outflows. Meanwhile, passive equity ETFs attracted over $600 billion. The culprits? Disappointing returns paired with hefty management fees. This pattern reflects a broader market realignment where investors increasingly favor low-cost, passive strategies over traditionally managed funds. The gap keeps widening.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 11h ago
Active fund managers are still sleepwalking, with sky-high fees and losses. No wonder everyone has switched to passive index funds.
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HodlTheDoor
· 11h ago
Serves you right. Those high-fee fund managers are still bragging about beating the market...
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Blockwatcher9000
· 12h ago
Active funds are really going to decline, with net outflows for 11 consecutive years. Who can withstand this?
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MultiSigFailMaster
· 12h ago
Active funds really have no future, with 11 consecutive years of outflows. This data is incredible... and the fees are still so high, investors aren't fools.
Bloomberg reported a striking shift in capital flows: roughly $1 trillion exited active equity mutual funds last year—the 11th consecutive year of outflows. Meanwhile, passive equity ETFs attracted over $600 billion. The culprits? Disappointing returns paired with hefty management fees. This pattern reflects a broader market realignment where investors increasingly favor low-cost, passive strategies over traditionally managed funds. The gap keeps widening.