Sovereign wealth funds rotate from U.S. stocks to bonds
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[November 18, 2020] By
Tom Arnold
LONDON (Reuters) - Sovereign wealth funds
pulled $4.1 billion from United States stocks in the third quarter,
while adding to their U.S. bond holdings by the most in at least three
years, data showed on Wednesday.
Around $4.5 billion was sucked into U.S. fixed income, with the bulk
into short-duration instruments, according to the eVestment data on
strategies managed by third-party fund managers.
The activity came ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November,
which sparked volatility on Wall Street in the week prior to the vote as
investors worried about the possibility of a contested outcome and as
coronavirus cases soared globally.
The exodus from U.S. stocks, the most in at least three years, was
likely not driven by the need for cash for governments at home, said
Elliot Hentov, head of policy research at State Street Global Advisors,
noting that recent debt issuance by sovereign funds' governments was up
massively and that they had a decent cash pile ahead of the coronavirus
crisis.
"The U.S. election may partially have been a driver and expectations of
an eventual non-U.S. recovery picking up, as well as the fact that
markets had recovered a lot by Q3 and, if well timed, it was an
opportune moment to sell," Hentov said.
The U.S. stocks outflow, which contrasted with an inflow into non-U.S.
equity for the second quarter in a row, was evidenced by Saudi Arabia's
Public Investment Fund cutting its exposure to North American equities
by $3 billion in the third quarter, a regulatory filing showed.
"SWFs are becoming much more agile in response to the extreme
fluctuations we have seen this year," said Rod Ringrow, head of official
institutions at asset manager Invesco. "I think these comments can be
applied to the PIF as well, although we do not see any pressure for cash
calls as of now, the PIF continues to lead the efforts to rebalance the
(Saudi Arabian) economy away from reliance on hydro-carbon revenue,
actively managing their portfolio to provide funds for investment makes
sense."
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A New York Stock Exchange employee uses his phone on Wall St.
outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New
York, U.S., November 9, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The move into U.S. fixed income contrasted with an outflow from non-U.S. fixed
income by almost the same amount, the data showed.
The preference for U.S. bonds could be a desire to seek quasi-cash in
anticipation of future liquidity needs, said Hentov.
Governments in several countries have drawn down savings from their funds in the
months after the pandemic.
Around 24 withdrawals totalling about $137 billion had been made from sovereign
funds globally in the wake of the pandemic and commodity price collapse, Global
SWF said in September.
Across all forms of investment, U.S. allocations had grown in 11 out of a total
of 15 sovereign funds which disclosed geographic allocation in their latest
annual reports, noted Javier Capapé, director of the sovereign wealth research
at IE Center for the Governance of Change.
That increase may be challenged by the possible continuation under Joe Biden's
administration of the economic protectionism started under Donald Trump's
presidency, said Capapé.
(Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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