In the week to May 19, $1.1 billion left
technology funds, the largest outflow since December 2018. Gold
funds attracted $1.3 billion, BofA said.
Tech stocks are particularly sensitive to rising interest rate
expectations because their value rests heavily on future
earnings, which are discounted more deeply when rates go up.
Investors cut overweight positions on technology stocks to a
three-year low, BofA's May fund manager survey showed.
Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) funds saw the
largest inflow in 24 weeks, taking in $2 billion. That came on
top of $1.9 billion inflows in the previous week.
Unprecedented stimulus measures to tackle the pandemic-induced
recession have now sparked worries about inflation, which
featured in the BofA survey as the biggest tail risk for
markets.
Last week, data showed U.S. consumer prices unexpectedly rose by
the most in nearly 12 years in April, triggering worries that
the Federal Reserve may have to raise rates sooner than it
currently expects.
U.S. Treasuries meanwhile saw their largest inflows in six
months, with $2.8 billion flowing into the safe-haven, the BofA
report showed.
(Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan; editing by Dhara Ranasinghe
and Hugh Lawson)
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