
Global equity funds post their biggest weekly outflow in six weeks
May 23 (Reuters) - Global equity funds have seen weekly outflows for the first time in six weeks, pressured by rising U.S. Treasury yields and mounting concerns over the U.S. debt burden and tax-cut legislation, following Moody's downgrade of the U.S. sovereign credit rating.
According to LSEG Lipper, global equity funds saw $9.4 billion in net outflows, a sharp reversal from more than $20 billion in inflows the previous week.
U.S. equity funds led the retreat, with $11 billion in redemptions, followed by $4.6 billion from Asian funds. European equity funds, on the other hand, received $5.4 billion in inflows.
"We suspect investors will be more cautious about piling into the U.S. stock market after the turmoil in April, especially given concerns around fiscal policy," said John Higgins, chief markets economist at Capital Economics.
"Those worries have coincided with another surge in long-dated Treasury yields this week following Moody's downgrade of the U.S.' sovereign credit rating and a poorly received 20-year auction," he said.
The 30-year Treasury yield climbed to a 19-month high on Thursday, coming within a few basis points of its highest level since 2007, after the House of Representatives passed a tax-and-spending package that intensified debt concerns.
In contrast to equities, global bond funds attracted $21.6 billion in inflows, indicating that investors see bonds as appealing at current yield levels. U.S. bond funds took in $7.6 billion, European bond funds added $11 billion, and Asian bond funds saw $1.8 billion in net inflows.
By category, U.S. government bond funds received $2.8 billion, U.S. high-yield bond funds drew $1.2 billion, and European corporate bond funds gained $1.5 billion.
Money market funds also rebounded, taking in $18.1 billion, following $34 billion in outflows the previous week.
However, gold and precious metals commodity funds saw $1.7 billion in outflows, marking their third consecutive week of redemptions.
Emerging market (EM) bond funds extended their winning streak with a fourth straight week of inflows, adding $403 million, while EM equity funds posted minor outflows. Still, EM equity funds have attracted $10.6 billion year-to-date, a 43% increase from the same period last year.
"The renewed interest in EM is partially due to the concern people have about the end of U.S. exceptionalism and lack of visibility with regards to U.S. ambition," said Alison Shimada, portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments.
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