U.S. equities suffer
longest outflow streak since 2004: BAML
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[August 25, 2017]
By Claire Milhench
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. equity funds have
suffered their longest outflows streak since 2004, Bank of America
Merrill Lynch (BAML) data showed on Friday.
Investors have been losing faith that President Donald Trump can deliver
on his ambitious tax cut and spending campaign pledges.
The data, which tracks fund flows from Wednesday to Wednesday, showed
investors pulled $2.6 billion from U.S. stocks over the last week, with
tech stock funds losing $600 million, their biggest outflows in almost a
year.
The S&P 500 <.SPX> is down over 1 percent so far this month, having
rallied almost 9 percent year-to-date, whilst U.S. tech stocks <.SPLRCT>
have surged over 22 percent so far this year.
But investors have grown increasingly concerned about stretched U.S.
equity valuations, with Trump's inability to usher legislation through
Congress raising doubts about his campaign promises to cut taxes and
boost spending.
Last week Trump dismantled two of his business advisory groups after
several chief executives quit following his response to racially charged
protests in Charlottesville, Virginia. This further eroded confidence in
Trump's ability to enact his reforms.
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A late-September deadline is now looming for U.S. officials to raise the debt
ceiling or risk default, leading investors to anticipate a volatile month.
"Since late June investors have withdrawn $30 billion from U.S. funds while
adding $36 billion to the rest of the world," said BAML's analysts, citing
inflows to emerging markets, Europe and Japan.
Japanese equities attracted $3.1 billion over the week, their biggest inflows in
five months, whilst emerging markets pulled in $200 million.
Emerging market equities continued to top BAML's table of cross-asset winners in
2017, returning 27.1 percent year-to-date in dollar terms. European equities
were in third place, delivering 18.7 percent, but suffered their first outflows
in seven weeks, losing $200 million.
Overall, global equities attracted $3.1 billion, whilst bond funds pulled in
$5.5 billion, with government bond and Treasury funds enjoying their largest
inflows in 10 weeks at $900 million.
Investment grade corporate bonds continued to attract the lion's share of the
fixed income flows, pulling in $5 billion, whilst emerging market debt funds
attracted $1.9 billion. High yield bonds suffered their second straight week of
chunky outflows, losing $2.2 billion.
(Reporting by Claire Milhench Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)
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