A liquid alts shop in the Southeast took the inflows lead proportionately last month as industry outflows per fund fell 79 percent.
| David Pursell Core Alternative Capital Founder, CEO | |
This article draws from
Morningstar Direct data on July 2022 open-end mutual fund and ETF flows, excluding money-market funds and funds of funds. (Other asset management products, like CITs and SMAs, are also not included.)
Core Alternative Capital took the lead last month, thanks to an estimated $93 million per fund in net July 2022 inflows, up month-over-month from $12 million per fund in
June 2022 outflows and up year-over-year from $3 million per fund in
July 2021 inflows. Other big July 2022 inflows winners included:
Aspiriant, $73 million per fund (up M/M from $17 million per fund in net outflows, up Y/Y from $12 million per fund in net inflows);
Ark, $47 million per fund (up M/M from $18 million per fund in net outflows, up Y/Y from $196 million per fund in net outflows);
VS Trust, $43 million per fund (up M/M from $1 million per fund in net outflows); and
Charles Schwab, $41 million per fund (up M/M from $13 million per fund, up Y/Y from $35 million per fund.)
So far in 2022,
Advanced Series Trust leads the inflows pack, thanks to an estimated $2.927 billion per fund in net year-to-date inflows as of July 31. Other big YTD inflows winners included:
Edward Jones' Bridge Builder, $685 million per fund; and
Horizon Kinetics, $254 million per fund.
On the flip side,
Edgewood led the outflows pack proportionately for a second month in a row last month, thanks to an estimated $247 million per fund in net July 2022 outflows, up M/M from $220 million per fund in June 2022 and down Y/Y from $179 million per fund in July 2021 inflows. Other big July 2022 outflows sufferers included:
Spyglass, $155 million per fund (up M/M from $58 million per fund, down Y/Y from $62 million per fund in net inflows);
Primecap, $49 million per fund (down M/M from $87 million per fund, down Y/Y from $63 million per fund);
Callahan's Trust for Credit Unions, $42 million per fund (up M/M from $20 million per fund, down Y/Y from $1 million per fund in net inflows); and
Sequoia, $40 million per fund (down M/M from $58 million per fund, down Y/Y from $66 million per fund).
Primecap still leads the 2022 outflows pack proportionately so far, thanks to an estimated $796 million per fund in net YTD outflows as of July 31. Other big YTD outflows sufferers included: Edgewood, $559 million per fund; and
River Canyon, $394 million per fund.
The whole long-term U.S. mutual fund and ETF industry (excluding money-market funds and funds of funds) suffered an estimated $309,000 per fund in net July 2022 outflows. That's down M/M from $1.459 million per fund in June 2022, and it's down Y/Y from $1.704 million per fund in July 2021 inflows.
As of July 31, the industry has suffered an estimated $2.927 million per fund in net 2022 outflows. 
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