U.S. stocks have been lifted by better-than-expected company
earnings reports, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average <.DJI>
closing above the 23,000 mark for the first time on Wednesday.
The S&P 500 <.SPX> and the Nasdaq <.IXIC> have also posted
record closing highs as investors continue to pour into
equities. Tech stocks attracted a bumper $1 billion, the largest
inflows in 38 weeks, BAML said.
But Japanese equities suffered their largest weekly outflows on
record, losing $4.4 billion, with 86 percent of this related to
redemptions from exchange traded funds, BAML said.
Japan's Nikkei <.N225> has posted its longest daily winning
streak in over 50 years, advancing more than 5 percent over the
last 14 days on hopes that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's
ruling coalition will win a national election on Oct. 22.
However, the market is prone to profit-taking before elections,
and following the election BAML's analysts expect Japan's TOPIX
<.TOPX> to revert to tracking U.S. bond yields.
In total, global equity funds attracted $8.8 billion, with
European stocks pulling in $1.1 billion and emerging markets
$1.8 billion.
Emerging market equities continue to top BAML's cross-asset
league table, with year-to-date returns of 33.5 percent in
dollar terms. European equities are in second place, returning
24.2 percent.
Bond funds attracted $5.8 billion, with $3.6 billion going into
actively-managed fixed income funds versus $2.2 billion into
passive bonds.
Investment grade corporate bonds enjoyed the bulk of the debt
inflows, attracting $5.3 billion, whilst emerging market debt
funds pulled in $1 billion.
Low yielding government bond and Treasury funds lost $1 billion
in their fifth straight week of outflows, and precious metals
suffered their largest outflows in 12 weeks, at $400 million, as
investors sought out riskier assets.
(Reporting by Claire Milhench; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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