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REUTERS: Global equity funds witnessed a surge in outflows in the week ended 11 May, as fears of an economic slowdown and further tightening by major central banks to tame stubborn inflation spooked investors.
In a fifth straight week of net selling, investors liquidated global equity funds worth $ 10.53 billion, compared with just $ 1.65 billion worth of net selling in the previous week, according to Refinitiv Lipper.
MSCI’s index of world shares plunged to a one and a half year low of 607.4 this week as inflationary pressures raised fears of an economic hard landing.
US equity funds witnessed net selling worth $ 8.46 billion, European funds saw disposal of $ 4.33 billion, but investors were net buyers in Asian funds worth $ 2.23 billion.
Among sector funds, financials record a sixth subsequent week of outflows, amounting $ 1.71 billion. Investors also drew about $ 0.7 billion each out of mining and industrials.
Meanwhile, global bond funds posted outflows of $ 13.23 billion in a sixth straight week of net selling.
Global short- and medium-term bond funds saw outflows of $ 8.14 billion in the biggest weekly outflow since at least June 2020, but Government bond funds lured a third weekly inflow, worth a net $ 3.38 billion.
Investors also withdrew $ 1.73 billion out of money market funds in their second weekly net selling in a row.
Data for commodities’ funds showed that weekly net selling in gold and precious metal funds jumped to a two-month’s peak of $ 1.54 billion, as gold prices broke below their 200-day moving averages.
An analysis of 24,155 emerging market funds showed that investors sold equity funds of $ 2.49 billion and bond funds of $ 2.65 billion, marking a fifth consecutive week of outflow in both segments.