U.S. President Donald Trump's tweets on Sunday
night, threatening to raise tariffs on Chinese imports, upended
the previously calm market and wiped roughly $2 trillion from
global equities this week.
"Risk pullback since May 1st highs follows furious rally,
initiated by less-dovish PBoC/Fed, accelerated by trade trauma
this week," the bank's strategists said, referring to central
bank policies of the People's Bank of China and Federal Reserve.
The cash leaving stocks in the week to May 8 was the third
biggest outflow so far this year, the bank said, and came as
Trump threatened further import tariffs on Chinese goods,
ratchetting up the prolonged trade spat between the world's two
largest economies.
U.S. equities had outflows of $14 billion, the biggest since
Jan. 30, BAML said, citing data from flow tracking specialist
EPFR. The S&P 500 has risen 14.5% year-to-date.
Investors, seeking shelter from the trade dispute, kept pumping
money into bonds, which saw inflows of $7.3 billion, making it
the eighteenth straight week of inflows.
"A trade war, with across-the-board tariffs on US-China trade,
would push the global economy towards recession," BAML warned in
a separate note to clients.
(Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan; Editing by Josephine Mason
and Peter Graff)
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