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New | Time may not be right for corporate bond funds

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A gaggle of traders in New York. Corporate bond fund investors react badly when losing money and can cause trouble when a selloff in illiquid markets start. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Corporate bond fund investors react badly, if intelligently, to losing money which may mean some bond funds run into and also cause trouble when a selloff in illiquid markets starts.

Given two trends - one towards lower bond market liquidity and the other of surging investment in corporate bond funds - this could end up being a big story.

From 2008 to 2014 funds invested in corporate bond mutual funds nearly tripled to more than US$1.8 trillion. That’s part of an overall drive towards more exposure to fixed income, but also got a push from regulatory and market changes making money market funds less attractive.

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At the same time, dealers working under new tighter regulations are no longer are willing to hold as much inventory. A new study, one of the first to look at the issue, shows that corporate bond investors behave very differently from their equity fund peers.

Equity fund investors are like dogs chasing cars, they bound after them if they go fast but show little idea how to handle matters if ever the car stops and they catch up.

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Good performance drives money into equity funds, but investors show surprisingly little sensitivity to bad performance.

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