Capital Group Cos., the largest U.S. manager of stock mutual funds, asked regulators for permission to open its first new fixed-income products in four years.
Capital Group Cos., the largest U.S. manager of stock mutual funds, asked regulators for permission to open its first new fixed-income products in four years.
The two funds, targeting municipal bonds issued in New York state and mortgage-related securities, would be available to investors at the beginning of December, according to the company, which filed prospectuses with the the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 6.
Investors, discouraged by falling equity markets, put $139.1 billion into bond mutual funds in the first half of 2010, compared with $2.64 billion into stock funds, according to research firm Morningstar Inc. in Chicago. Capital Group’s American Funds managed $835 billion, excluding money-market funds, as of June 30, with about 85 percent in stock-dominated products. The Los Angeles-based firm oversees about $1.1 trillion.
“This has been part of our plan for several years,” Maura Griffin, a New York-based spokeswoman for closely held Capital Group, said in a telephone interview. “This is not a response to current market conditions.”
John Smet, a senior bond fund manager with the firm, said in a November interview that Capital Group planned to expand fixed-income offerings and assets in a “5 to 10-year process.”
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of U.S. stocks declined 3.2 percent this year through yesterday. The MSCI EAFE Index of developed non-U.S. markets fell 7.8 percent.
Fund Withdrawals
Morningstar, which first reported the filings today, estimated that American Funds lost $19 billion to investor withdrawals during the first half of the year. American was alone among the top 10 U.S. mutual-fund families to have net withdrawals.
Vanguard Group Inc., the largest U.S. manager of stock and bond mutual funds, attracted $39.9 billion in client money during the same period. The Valley Forge, Pennsylvania-based company oversees $1.07 trillion.
American Funds Mortgage Fund would invest at least 80 percent of its assets in mortgage-related securities including futures contracts, according to the proposed prospectus. Tax- Exempt Fund of New York would invest at least 80 percent in municipal bonds issued by the state, its agencies and municipalities.
Fund managers acting independently will pick securities, an approach the firm has used for more than 50 years.
American Funds last opened a bond fund, the Short-Term Bond Fund of America, in October 2006.