Large money managers were bruised in the third quarter by market
declines and investor outflows, the latest sign of the ills
afflicting the U.S. mutual-fund industry.
A round of quarterly reports, released Thursday, included
Franklin Resources Inc.'s largest investor withdrawal in more than
a dozen years. But shares of the company and smaller rivals Janus
Capital Group Inc., T. Rowe Price Group Inc. and AllianceBernstein
Holding LP rose as much as 6%.
Short sellers, investors who borrow shares and sell them in a
bid to benefit from expected stock-price declines, likely helped
fuel the gains by covering their bearish bets amid a marketwide
rally driven by signs that the European Central Bank may expand
stimulus this year.
Even so, shares of many asset managers remain down for 2015, and
many analysts say the investor shifts that have hit results will
likely continue to hamper the firms. Short interest, reflecting
bets that share prices will fall, have risen this year at both
Franklin and T. Rowe Price.
All three firms manage mutual funds at a time when cheaper,
"passive" strategies such as index funds have been gaining ground.
Franklin was also hit by a sharp decline in the latest quarter in
emerging markets, an area where the firm has large exposure through
its Templeton Global Bond Fund.
Mutual-fund firms "will likely continue to be challenged" by
soft global growth and volatile markets, said Michael Kim, an
analyst at Sandler O'Neill + Partners. "You're going to see
investors continue to be very uncertain and lack conviction in
terms of risk appetite."
Franklin, the parent company of Franklin Templeton Investments,
said that assets under management were $770.9 billion at Sept. 30,
down $95.6 billion, or 11%, from the previous quarter. The figure
reflects asset-price declines and investor withdrawals.
Net income at the San Mateo, Calif., firm fell to $358.2
million, or 59 cents a diluted share, from the year-ago $640.6
million, or $1.02 a share. Revenue fell 13% to $1.87 billion.
During the quarter, the company's fiscal fourth period,
investors pulled $28.6 billion from Franklin's fixed-income and
stock mutual funds, the largest quarterly outflow since at least
2002, according to Mr. Kim.
In the 12 months ended Sept. 30, investors pulled $48.8 billion
from Franklin's funds.
"Fiscal 2015 was challenging in many respects," Greg Johnson,
Franklin's chairman and chief executive, said on a conference call
Thursday. "Risk aversion spiked alongside volatility, resulting in
underperformance of economically sensitive stocks, the continued
decline in emerging-markets equities and currencies, and one of the
longest commodity routs on record."
One investor who held a short position in Franklin said that the
decline in assets under management was higher than anticipated, and
that some investors had expected outflows as low as $16 billion for
the quarter.
Franklin's stock was up 6% to $40.19 in midafternoon
trading.
"There were a fair amount of investors that were short the stock
and some investors used the [earnings] opportunity to cover their
short positions," Mr. Kim said.
A Franklin spokesman declined to comment on the firm's stock
price movement.
The combination of soft results, outflows and rising shares was
repeated at Janus Capital Group and T. Rowe Price Group.
At Janus, the Denver-based money manager with $185 billion in
assets under management, investors pulled $3.3 billion in the
latest quarter. The firm reported third-quarter net income of $19.9
million, or 10 cents a share, down from $40.9 million, or 22 cents
a share, a year earlier. Revenue rose to $273.8 million from $237
million the year earlier.
Shares rose 7% to $15.28. A Janus spokeswoman declined to
comment on the stock movement.
Assets at T. Rowe Price sank $47.5 billion from the previous
quarter to $725.5 billion. Investors pulled $700 million during the
quarter. Net income for the quarter ended Sept. 30 fell to $277.1
million, or $1.06 a share, from the year-earlier $303.6 million, or
$1.12 a share.
Shares rose to $74.18 in afternoon trading, up 6.52%. A
spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment.
At AllianceBernstein, assets dropped 4.6% at Sept. 30 to $462.9
billion, as investors pulled $2.4 billion. Net income fell to $42.7
million, or 43 cents a share, in the third quarter from $44.1
million, or 45 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. The
company's stock was up 4.5% to $27.58 in afternoon trading.
Many asset managers have been hit this year, in part because of
market volatility over the summer. Franklin's stock is down about
27% for 2015, while T. Rowe Price is down 13% and Janus is off
5.6%. AllianceBernstein is up 6.4% year to date.
Matt Wirz contributed to this article.
Write to Kirsten Grind at kirsten.grind@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 22, 2015 16:25 ET (20:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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