The net inflow into equities totaled $900
million in the week to Wednesday, the first in 10 weeks, the
bank said, citing EPFR data. That is eclipsed by the $135
billion that has left stocks year to date.
Some $3.9 billion left emerging market equities, the biggest
since June last year.
Global equities, which rallied 15% until U.S. President Donald
Trump upped the ante in early May, have retreated as tit-for-tat
tariffs kicked-in and fading hopes of a trade deal with China in
the near-term kept investors away from risky assets.
Washington's Huawei ban added to trade tensions between the
world's two largest economies and triggered worries about a
prolonged standoff over technology.
"U.S.-China tech cold war to run for years, political shift to
protectionism and redistribution well underway in West," BAML
said.
Global bonds saw inflows of $6.4 billion, adding to the $158
billion that's already gone into safe-haven debt this year.
Despite growing worries over a trade war, BAML said it still
expects new highs in risk assets this summer and cannot see
"Trump escalating China trade war from here".
(Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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