Equities back in favor for sovereign investors in third
quarter
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[November 20, 2019] By
Tom Arnold
LONDON (Reuters) - Sovereign wealth funds
regained their appetite for equities in the third quarter, piling into
passively managed stocks in the United States and equities in mainland
China and elsewhere, according to eVestment data.
Passively managed S&P 500 funds -- those that buy a basket of S&P 500
stocks and hold them rather than trading day to day -- took in $1.09
billion from sovereign investors during the period, the first net inflow
since the fourth quarter of 2016, after significant outflows in recent
years.
In another sign of renewed interest in equities, sovereign investor
inflows to global enhanced equity funds -- which are actively managed --
reached $1.05 billion, their largest since the fourth quarter of 2017.
"This is an indication that SWFs (sovereign wealth funds) have slowly
seen their sentiment change in the near term to global equities, both to
active and passive strategies, as they had been removing assets at an
elevated rate in the three quarters prior to Q2 2019," said Peter
Laurelli, global head of research at eVestment, which collates data from
firms managing money on behalf of institutional investors.
U.S. stocks have reached record highs as hopes have risen of a
breakthrough in the U.S.-China trade discussions. At the same time,
fears of a U.S. recession have eased, helping support forecasts for
corporate earnings.
J.P. Morgan Asset Management this week raised its outlook on global
stocks, while UBS moved its overall position on equities to neutral.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., November 13, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Allocations by sovereign investors to onshore Chinese stocks, or A
shares, rose to a record level, with inflows of $1.12 billion during the
quarter.
"It may be the case that while SWF's exposure to China will increase as
a result of their exposure to passive global EM equity strategies, a
segment to which they've allocated nearly $7 billion since the beginning
of 2018, there is additional interest in supplementing that long-only
index-based exposure to China with alternative approaches," Laurelli
said.
China is stepping up opening its capital markets and foreign holdings of
Chinese stocks rose to a record high at the end of September.
Global index provider MSCI said this month A shares will rise to a
weight of 4.1% in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index from 2.55% currently,
as part of its final step in the weight increase of Chinese shares in
the emerging-markets benchmark.
(Reporting by Tom Arnold, editing by Larry King)
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