<rss version="2.0"><channel xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"><title>Lipper Podcasts</title><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/Podcasts.aspx</link><description>In-depth discussions covering topics of interest to fund professionals and investors.
We have a remote television studio in our Denver offices and studio access in London for creating seamless televised segments.
    </description><language>en-US</language><copyright>℗ &amp; © 2009 THOMSON REUTERS . All rights reserved.</copyright><managingEditor>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</managingEditor><category>Business</category><category>Investing</category><image><url>http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg</url><title>Lipper Podcasts</title><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/Podcasts.aspx</link></image><itunes:subtitle>Available for commentary and interviews.</itunes:subtitle><itunes:author>Lipper,Thomson Reuters.</itunes:author><itunes:summary>In-depth discussions covering topics of interest to fund professionals and investors.
We have a remote television studio in our Denver offices and studio access in London for creating seamless televised segments.
    </itunes:summary><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Lipper,Thomson Reuters.</itunes:name><itunes:email>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</itunes:email></itunes:owner><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/><itunes:category text="Business"><itunes:category text="Investing"/></itunes:category><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,mutual funds,tom roseen, lipper fmi,fund research,investing,matthew lemieux,thomson reuters,Lipper FMI,fixed income funds,equity</itunes:keywords><itunes:explicit>Clean</itunes:explicit><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20120125-TR-Flash.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-january-25-2012.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 25, 2012</title><description>The Market cheered the news that the Fed planned to keep interest rates low through late 2014 and that better-than-expected earnings and guidance was reported from the likes of Apple, IBM, and Microsoft. Investors injected $7.7 billion into equity funds (including ETFs), $6.2 billion into fixed income funds (the largest weekly inflows since November 2009), and $0.5 billion into tax-exempt bond funds for the week ended January 25, 2012.  However, money market fund outflows of $19.2 billion overwhelmed the inflows of the other macro-groups, leaving investors net redeemers of fund assets to the tune of $4.8 billion. &#xD;
&#xD;
Equity ETFs accounted for $6.6 billion of the net new money for the week, while open-end equity funds (+$1.1 billion) experienced their third consecutive week of inflows, with the four-week moving average returning to the black (+$0.3 billion) for the first week since September 7, 2011--a signal that investor interest in equity funds is gaining momentum. &#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 27 Jan 2012 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20120125-TR-Flash.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="102400"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 25, 2012</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>The Market cheered the news that the Fed planned to keep interest rates low through late 2014 and that better-than-expected earnings and guidance was reported from the likes of Apple, IBM, and Microsoft. Investors injected $7.7 billion into equity funds (including ETFs), $6.2 billion into fixed income funds (the largest weekly inflows since November 2009), and $0.5 billion into tax-exempt bond funds for the week ended January 25, 2012.  However, money market fund outflows of $19.2 billion overwhelmed the inflows of the other macro-groups, leaving investors net redeemers of fund assets to the tune of $4.8 billion. &#xD;
&#xD;
Equity ETFs accounted for $6.6 billion of the net new money for the week, while open-end equity funds (+$1.1 billion) experienced their third consecutive week of inflows, with the four-week moving average returning to the black (+$0.3 billion) for the first week since September 7, 2011--a signal that investor interest in equity funds is gaining momentum. &#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:56</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,mutual funds,tom roseen</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20120118-LM-Flash_4.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-january-18-2012.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 18, 2012</title><description>Rising optimism in U.S. equity markets continued to draw investors off the sidelines as mutual funds reported net outflows of $2.9 billion for the week. Once adjusted for the effects of money market activity (-$7.3 billion) the totals looked a bit more promising at inflows of $4.4 billion. Equity funds recorded inflows of roughly $800 million while taxable bond funds added $2.6 billion mostly between High Yield (+$796 million) and Investment Grade (+$640 million) products. Municipal bond funds continued to build momentum with roughly $1 billion in new assets—their second week at such a level.</description><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2012 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20120118-LM-Flash_4.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="42576896"/><itunes:author>Matthew  Lemieux</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 18, 2012</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Rising optimism in U.S. equity markets continued to draw investors off the sidelines as mutual funds reported net outflows of $2.9 billion for the week. Once adjusted for the effects of money market activity (-$7.3 billion) the totals looked a bit more promising at inflows of $4.4 billion. Equity funds recorded inflows of roughly $800 million while taxable bond funds added $2.6 billion mostly between High Yield (+$796 million) and Investment Grade (+$640 million) products. Municipal bond funds continued to build momentum with roughly $1 billion in new assets—their second week at such a level.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:6</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> lipper fmi,estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,investing,matthew lemieux,mutual funds,thomson reuters</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20120111-JT_5.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-january-11-2012.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 11, 2012</title><description>Jeff Tjornehoj discusses weekly flows in funds and ETFs for the week ended January 11, 2012.</description><pubDate>Fri, 13 Jan 2012 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20120111-JT_5.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="481280000"/><itunes:author>Jeff  Tjornehoj</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 11, 2012</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Jeff Tjornehoj discusses weekly flows in funds and ETFs for the week ended January 11, 2012.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:4:12</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>Lipper FMI,fixed income funds,fund research,mutual funds</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20120104-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-january-4-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 4, 2011</title><description>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended January 4, 2012. After a quiet end to 2011 the first day of the New Year brought optimism to the markets with global manufacturing data showing positive signs of life. Unfortunately the mood did not translate into positive flows as mutual fund and ETF investors were net redeemers of roughly $3.1 billion. Equity funds accounted for half of all outflows, giving back $2.7 billion for the week. ETFs accounted for the most activity as the iShares MSCI EAFE Index ETF (EFA) drew in roughly $513 million and the SPDR S&amp;P 500 Index ETF (SPY) posted net outflows of $1.1 billion. Taxable bond funds (+$1.7 billion) extended their inflow streak to three weeks, with investors continuing to show preference for quality over risk. Corporate investment grade bond funds attracted $1.1 billion in net new assets while mortgage funds followed suit with $257 million. Money market funds recorded their second consecutive week of outflows with $2.6 billion in net redemptions. Despite strong inflows for November and December the group ended the year down with approximately $146.3 billion in outflows.  Lastly, municipal bond funds continued to draw assets with $523 million, ending 2011 with inflows for 16 of the past 18 weeks.</description><pubDate>Fri, 06 Jan 2012 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20120104-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="44479488"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - January 4, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended January 4, 2012. After a quiet end to 2011 the first day of the New Year brought optimism to the markets with global manufacturing data showing positive signs of life. Unfortunately the mood did not translate into positive flows as mutual fund and ETF investors were net redeemers of roughly $3.1 billion. Equity funds accounted for half of all outflows, giving back $2.7 billion for the week. ETFs accounted for the most activity as the iShares MSCI EAFE Index ETF (EFA) drew in roughly $513 million and the SPDR S&amp;P 500 Index ETF (SPY) posted net outflows of $1.1 billion. Taxable bond funds (+$1.7 billion) extended their inflow streak to three weeks, with investors continuing to show preference for quality over risk. Corporate investment grade bond funds attracted $1.1 billion in net new assets while mortgage funds followed suit with $257 million. Money market funds recorded their second consecutive week of outflows with $2.6 billion in net redemptions. Despite strong inflows for November and December the group ended the year down with approximately $146.3 billion in outflows.  Lastly, municipal bond funds continued to draw assets with $523 million, ending 2011 with inflows for 16 of the past 18 weeks.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:52</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,mutual funds,tom roseen</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111214-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-december-14-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - December 14, 2011</title><description>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended December 14, 2011. Shrugging off a 1.4% gain in the Dow for the week ended December 9 on news that European leaders agreed to closer fiscal ties, investors scrambled for cover, redeeming a net $7.28 billion from the fund universe (including ETFs) for the week ended December 14, 2011, on continued doubts of a speedy resolution to the lingering European debt crisis and after the Federal Reserve left rates unchanged and signaled it would not be implementing another round of quantitative easing. Equity funds saw a net $8.2 billion in net redemption for the week; however, the majority of redemptions came from one fund, The SPDR S&amp;P 500 ETF (SPY), which saw net redemptions of $7.3 billion. Equity funds, including ETFs, witnessed their third week of net outflows in four; however, ex-ETFs saw their sixth consecutive week of outflows (-$1.6 billion). Interestingly, and as a direct result of investors search for yield, Equity Income Funds witnessed their thirty-first week of net inflows, attracting $962 million during the week. Investors withdrew $0.7 billion from taxable fixed income funds, while padding the coffers of municipal bond funds and money market funds, to the tune of $0.5 billion and $1.0 billion, respectively. &#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 16 Dec 2011 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111214-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="47055872"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - December 14, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended December 14, 2011. Shrugging off a 1.4% gain in the Dow for the week ended December 9 on news that European leaders agreed to closer fiscal ties, investors scrambled for cover, redeeming a net $7.28 billion from the fund universe (including ETFs) for the week ended December 14, 2011, on continued doubts of a speedy resolution to the lingering European debt crisis and after the Federal Reserve left rates unchanged and signaled it would not be implementing another round of quantitative easing. Equity funds saw a net $8.2 billion in net redemption for the week; however, the majority of redemptions came from one fund, The SPDR S&amp;P 500 ETF (SPY), which saw net redemptions of $7.3 billion. Equity funds, including ETFs, witnessed their third week of net outflows in four; however, ex-ETFs saw their sixth consecutive week of outflows (-$1.6 billion). Interestingly, and as a direct result of investors search for yield, Equity Income Funds witnessed their thirty-first week of net inflows, attracting $962 million during the week. Investors withdrew $0.7 billion from taxable fixed income funds, while padding the coffers of municipal bond funds and money market funds, to the tune of $0.5 billion and $1.0 billion, respectively. &#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:7:6</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,tom roseen</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111207-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-december-7-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - December 7, 2011</title><description>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended December 7, 2011. Despite strong market performance and better-than-expected November nonfarm payroll numbers reported during the week, investors took risk off their portfolios after hearing about on again/off again European debt woes. Money market funds attracted some $25.3 billion in net new money, with institutional money market funds drawing $16.4 billion and taxable bond funds and municipal bond funds attracting $3.4 billion and slightly less than $1.0 billion, respectively. For the week, conventional equity funds (excluding ETFs) experienced net redemptions, with investors removing $4.8 billion from fund coffers.  &#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2011 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111207-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="44574720"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - December 7, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended December 7, 2011. Despite strong market performance and better-than-expected November nonfarm payroll numbers reported during the week, investors took risk off their portfolios after hearing about on again/off again European debt woes. Money market funds attracted some $25.3 billion in net new money, with institutional money market funds drawing $16.4 billion and taxable bond funds and municipal bond funds attracting $3.4 billion and slightly less than $1.0 billion, respectively. For the week, conventional equity funds (excluding ETFs) experienced net redemptions, with investors removing $4.8 billion from fund coffers.  &#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:7:15</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,tom roseen</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20111130-JT_0.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-november-30-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 30, 2011</title><description>Lipper's Jeff Tjornehoj dissects the the funds industry's flows data for this week.</description><pubDate>Fri, 02 Dec 2011 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FFIR-20111130-JT_0.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="30155776"/><itunes:author>Jeff  Tjornehoj</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 30, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Lipper's Jeff Tjornehoj dissects the the funds industry's flows data for this week.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:5:14</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>Lipper FMI,equity,fixed income,jeff tjornehoj,lipper leaders,mutual funds</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111116-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-november-16-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 16, 2011</title><description>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended November 16, 2011. Despite late-week European debt issues and new concerns about U.S. banks, mutual fund investors injected a net $10.0 billion into mutual funds--including ETFs--for the week ended November 16. Earlier in the week, investors cheered better-than-expected initial jobless claims, a jump in exports, and a 0.5%-leap in October retail sales and were net purchasers of equity funds, injecting $2.8 billion. Equity funds, including ETFs, witnessed their fifth consecutive week of net inflows; however, ex-ETFs saw their second week of outflows (-$0.2 billion). &#xD;
&#xD;
Interestingly, perhaps as a result of the on again/off again European debt issues, weary investors for the sixth consecutive week injected some $2.8 billion into taxable fixed income funds and for the second week in a row padded the coffers of money market funds to the tune of $2.9 billion. Municipal bond funds witnessed their sixth consecutive week of net inflows, taking in about $493 million.  &#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 18 Nov 2011 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111116-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="48349184"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 16, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended November 16, 2011. Despite late-week European debt issues and new concerns about U.S. banks, mutual fund investors injected a net $10.0 billion into mutual funds--including ETFs--for the week ended November 16. Earlier in the week, investors cheered better-than-expected initial jobless claims, a jump in exports, and a 0.5%-leap in October retail sales and were net purchasers of equity funds, injecting $2.8 billion. Equity funds, including ETFs, witnessed their fifth consecutive week of net inflows; however, ex-ETFs saw their second week of outflows (-$0.2 billion). &#xD;
&#xD;
Interestingly, perhaps as a result of the on again/off again European debt issues, weary investors for the sixth consecutive week injected some $2.8 billion into taxable fixed income funds and for the second week in a row padded the coffers of money market funds to the tune of $2.9 billion. Municipal bond funds witnessed their sixth consecutive week of net inflows, taking in about $493 million.  &#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:8:15</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> estimated sales,fund research,mutual funds,tom roseen,weekly flows</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111109-ML_1.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-november-9-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 9, 2011</title><description>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended November 9, 2011. Despite a modest rise in the markets over the first four days of the week, widening spreads on Italian debt helped push investors to the door on Wednesday. Continued uncertainty over the fate of the Eurozone was exacerbated as two of the troubled nations, Greece and Italy, looked to introduce new governments. Despite this news it looked as investors were still willing to allocate new cash to the fund industry. Overall, the conventional mutual fund business attracted net inflows of $20.8 billion, with equity funds reporting net outflows of $519 million. Taxable bond funds (+$3.6 billion) posted their 5th consecutive week of inflows as Corporate Investment Grade funds attracted the most attention with $1.3 billion in net new assets. Municipal bond funds continued to be attractive with net inflows of $733 million, their largest weekly inflows since September of 2010. Money market funds benefited from the volatile market adding some $17.0 billion to their coffers.</description><pubDate>Fri, 11 Nov 2011 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111109-ML_1.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="35201024"/><itunes:author>Matthew  Lemieux</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 9, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended November 9, 2011. Despite a modest rise in the markets over the first four days of the week, widening spreads on Italian debt helped push investors to the door on Wednesday. Continued uncertainty over the fate of the Eurozone was exacerbated as two of the troubled nations, Greece and Italy, looked to introduce new governments. Despite this news it looked as investors were still willing to allocate new cash to the fund industry. Overall, the conventional mutual fund business attracted net inflows of $20.8 billion, with equity funds reporting net outflows of $519 million. Taxable bond funds (+$3.6 billion) posted their 5th consecutive week of inflows as Corporate Investment Grade funds attracted the most attention with $1.3 billion in net new assets. Municipal bond funds continued to be attractive with net inflows of $733 million, their largest weekly inflows since September of 2010. Money market funds benefited from the volatile market adding some $17.0 billion to their coffers.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:5</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> estimated net sales, estimated sales,Lipper FMI,fund ,fund research,investing,lipper,matthew lemieux,mutual funds,thomson reuters</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111102-JT_2.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-november-2-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 2, 2011</title><description>Jeff Tjornehoj discusses the flows into and out of the funds industry this week.</description><pubDate>Fri, 04 Nov 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111102-JT_2.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="22835200"/><itunes:author>Jeff  Tjornehoj</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - November 2, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Jeff Tjornehoj discusses the flows into and out of the funds industry this week.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:4:21</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> estimated net sales,ETFs,exchange traded funds,fund research,investing,jeff tjornehoj,mutual funds</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111026-ML_1.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-october-26-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 26, 2011</title><description>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended October 26, 2011.

With three consecutive weeks of positive market gains on the horizon and optimistic news out of the Eurozone, investors injected roughly $4.2 billion into mutual funds for the week ending October 26th 2011. The big news was on the fixed income side as High Yield Funds (+$3.6 billion) experienced their largest weekly net inflows since Lipper began tracking them in 1992. Tightening spreads and upward pressure in the equity markets helped push investors back into risk through the junk based products.

Equity funds (+$3.0 billion) also reported net inflows for the week as a $3.7 billion push into ETFs helped overcome the negative sentiment on the traditional fund side—mutual funds reported net redemptions of $742 million for the week. Municipal bond funds posted their third consecutive week of inflows with $310 million as investors pulled a net $1.1 billion from money market funds.
</description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111026-ML_1.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="36668416"/><itunes:author>Matthew  Lemieux</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 26, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended October 26, 2011.

With three consecutive weeks of positive market gains on the horizon and optimistic news out of the Eurozone, investors injected roughly $4.2 billion into mutual funds for the week ending October 26th 2011. The big news was on the fixed income side as High Yield Funds (+$3.6 billion) experienced their largest weekly net inflows since Lipper began tracking them in 1992. Tightening spreads and upward pressure in the equity markets helped push investors back into risk through the junk based products.

Equity funds (+$3.0 billion) also reported net inflows for the week as a $3.7 billion push into ETFs helped overcome the negative sentiment on the traditional fund side—mutual funds reported net redemptions of $742 million for the week. Municipal bond funds posted their third consecutive week of inflows with $310 million as investors pulled a net $1.1 billion from money market funds.
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:20</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> estimated net sales,Lipper FMI,estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,investing,lipper,matthew lemieux,mutual funds,thomson reuters</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111012-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-october-12-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 12, 2011</title><description>After finishing up a sixth winning session in seven on Wednesday for the S&amp;P 500, it was somewhat surprising to see mutual fund investors withdraw a net $2.6 billion from mutual funds--excluding ETFs--for the week ended October 12. Investors appeared to shrug off a better-than-expected nonfarm payroll report, a surge in equity indices, and a sixth round of loans for flailing Greece, and were net redeemers of equity funds, pulling out $3.1 billion. Despite finishing the week up 6.34%, equity funds suffered their fifth consecutive week of outflows. &#xD;
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Interestingly, despite a decline in Treasury prices and a jump in yields because of a lackluster sale of the 3-year note on Tuesday, weary investors injected some $2.6 billion into taxable fixed income funds for the first week in three, while pulling out $2.2 billion from money market funds--their first week of net redemptions in three. Municipal bond funds witnessed their fifth week in six of net inflows, taking in about $52 million.  &#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 14 Oct 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111012-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="38868992"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 12, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>After finishing up a sixth winning session in seven on Wednesday for the S&amp;P 500, it was somewhat surprising to see mutual fund investors withdraw a net $2.6 billion from mutual funds--excluding ETFs--for the week ended October 12. Investors appeared to shrug off a better-than-expected nonfarm payroll report, a surge in equity indices, and a sixth round of loans for flailing Greece, and were net redeemers of equity funds, pulling out $3.1 billion. Despite finishing the week up 6.34%, equity funds suffered their fifth consecutive week of outflows. &#xD;
&#xD;
Interestingly, despite a decline in Treasury prices and a jump in yields because of a lackluster sale of the 3-year note on Tuesday, weary investors injected some $2.6 billion into taxable fixed income funds for the first week in three, while pulling out $2.2 billion from money market funds--their first week of net redemptions in three. Municipal bond funds witnessed their fifth week in six of net inflows, taking in about $52 million.  &#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:6:14</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,mutual funds,tom roseen,weekly flows</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111005-ML.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-october-5-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 5, 2011</title><description>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended October 5, 2011. 
As the third quarter ended investors took tally of how bad things actually were. The S&amp;P 500 ended the three-month span with negative returns of 14.33 percent, the worst quarter of performance since the financial crisis took hold in Q4 2008. Although the flows week ended on a positive note investors continued to move out of risk assets. For the week the conventional mutual fund business posted inflows of $3.6 billion with most of any positive asset numbers going to money market funds (+6.2 billion). Equity mutual funds posted their fourth consecutive week of outflows with $638 million in net sales. Taxable bond funds also could not avoid investor’s concerns as the group posted their largest week of outflows, at $1.8 billion, since August 17th of this year. Municipal Bond funds broke their four week winning streak as they posted net outflows of $153 million, possibly attributed to bailout concerns circulating over the Franco-Belgium bank Dexia.</description><pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20111005-ML.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="30566400"/><itunes:author>Matthew  Lemieux</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - October 5, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Matthew Lemieux reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended October 5, 2011. 
As the third quarter ended investors took tally of how bad things actually were. The S&amp;P 500 ended the three-month span with negative returns of 14.33 percent, the worst quarter of performance since the financial crisis took hold in Q4 2008. Although the flows week ended on a positive note investors continued to move out of risk assets. For the week the conventional mutual fund business posted inflows of $3.6 billion with most of any positive asset numbers going to money market funds (+6.2 billion). Equity mutual funds posted their fourth consecutive week of outflows with $638 million in net sales. Taxable bond funds also could not avoid investor’s concerns as the group posted their largest week of outflows, at $1.8 billion, since August 17th of this year. Municipal Bond funds broke their four week winning streak as they posted net outflows of $153 million, possibly attributed to bailout concerns circulating over the Franco-Belgium bank Dexia.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:5:14</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>Lipper FMI,estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,lipper,matthew lemieux,mutual funds,thomson reuters</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20110928-JT.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-september-28-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - September 28, 2011</title><description>Jeff Tjornehoj reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly flows data for the week ended September 28, 2011. Investors reversed course from last week's outflows and allocated an estimated $4.9 billion in net new money toward mutual funds, the bulk of it to money market funds.</description><pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20110928-JT.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="21641216"/><itunes:author>Jeff  Tjornehoj</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - September 28, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Jeff Tjornehoj reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly flows data for the week ended September 28, 2011. Investors reversed course from last week's outflows and allocated an estimated $4.9 billion in net new money toward mutual funds, the bulk of it to money market funds.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:5:6</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords> estimated net sales,estimated net sales,estimates,fund flows,jeff tjornehoj,money markets</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20110921-TR.mp4</guid><link>http://www.lipperweb.com/Commentary/lipper-weekly-u-s-fund-flows-video-series-september-21-2011.aspx</link><author>lipperclientservices@thomsonreuters.com</author><title>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - September 21, 2011</title><description>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended September 21, 2011. Investors redeemed $14.3 billion from the conventional fund business for the week ended September 21, 2011, after the Fed showed its concern for slowing economic growth and Standard &amp; Poor's downgraded a few Italian banks. Ironically, flows into nondomestic equity funds remained on the plus side, while domestic equity funds experienced outflows. The lion's share of net redemptions came from money market funds during the week.&#xD;
</description><pubDate>Fri, 23 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><enclosure url="http://alt.lipperweb.com/presentation/p/Lipper-FMIR-20110921-TR.mp4" type="video/mp4" length="48771072"/><itunes:author>Tom  Roseen</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>Lipper Weekly U.S. Fund Flows Video Series - September 21, 2011</itunes:subtitle><itunes:summary>Tom Roseen reviews Lipper's U.S. weekly fund flows for the week ended September 21, 2011. Investors redeemed $14.3 billion from the conventional fund business for the week ended September 21, 2011, after the Fed showed its concern for slowing economic growth and Standard &amp; Poor's downgraded a few Italian banks. Ironically, flows into nondomestic equity funds remained on the plus side, while domestic equity funds experienced outflows. The lion's share of net redemptions came from money market funds during the week.&#xD;
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>0:7:53</itunes:duration><itunes:keywords>estimated net sales,fund flows,fund research,mutual funds,tom roseen</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.lipperweb.com/img/lipper_podcast_icon.jpg"/></item></channel></rss>
