Subscribe

T. Rowe assets up 2% in quarter despite $5.1 billion in net outflows

Mutual fund assets reach $477.6 billion as of Dec. 31, up 2.4% from Sept. 30.

T. Rowe Price Group on Wednesday reported $746.8 billion in assets under management as of Dec. 31, up 2% from three months earlier and up 8% from a year earlier.
Net outflows for the fourth quarter were $5.1 billion, compared with net inflows of $200 million in the previous quarter. T. Rowe reported net outflows of $1.3 billion from the firm’s mutual funds for the quarter ended Dec. 31 and net outflows of $3.8 billion from its other investment portfolios.
Mutual fund assets were $477.6 billion as of Dec. 31, up 2.4% from Sept. 30 and up 9.7% from Dec. 31, 2013.
(More: Vanguard warns advisers on stock risk in client portfolios)
As of Dec. 31, $148.5 billion of AUM was in T. Rowe Price’s target-date portfolios, of which $126 billion was in target-date funds and $22.5 billion was in target-date trusts. The total target-date AUM was up 4.3% from three months earlier and up 22.5% from a year earlier.
(More: T. Rowe’s David: Opportunities in a rising rate environment)
Net income for the quarter came to $315.9 million, 4% higher than the previous quarter and 10% higher than the fourth quarter of 2013. Net revenue, meanwhile, totaled $1 billion, the same as the third quarter but up 10% from the year-earlier quarter.
James Comtois is a reporter at sister publication Pensions & Investments

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Alternatives in target-date funds can increase retirement income, lower risk: report

Georgetown report also notes diversification of TDFs requires education for participants and oversight by plan sponsors.

Neuberger Berman launches specialty finance group

Investment management firm names Peter Sterling to head the new group.

New York state creates voluntary retirement savings program

Program targets private-sector workers who don't have access to a retirement savings plan.

Managers allocate less to global equities, more to bonds

Large majority of investors now believe the global economy is in 'late cycle,' BofA survey finds.

BlackRock’s Larry Fink: Money managers must help companies focus on long-term thinking

Geopolitical uncertainty, created in part by Brexit and the U.S. presidential race, is leading to “intense short-termism,” he says.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print