Monday, 6 April 2015 00:00
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NEW YORK: Investors worldwide poured $ 8.5 billion into fixed-income funds in the week ended 1 April, marking the first three months of this year as the biggest first quarter for fixed-income inflows since 2001, according to data from a Bank of America (BofA) Merrill Lynch Global Research report.
The first quarter posted net cash inflows of $ 102 billion, according to the BofA report, which also cited data from fund-tracker EPFR Global. Investment-grade bond funds saw the majority of the net inflows in the latest week with $ 5.3 billion.
European equity funds also had strong inflows at the end of the first quarter. Funds that specialise in European stocks attracted $ 3.7 billion of net inflows in the week ended 1 April, their 12th straight week of net inflows.
Funds that specialise in Japanese stocks also posted inflows in the latest week, with $ 1.9 billion of net inflows, their sixth straight week, BofA said.
Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett and Brian Leung, authors of the report, said the European Central Bank’s 1 trillion-euro government bond-buying program is spurring surging demand for European equities. “ECB Quantitative Easing-inspired inflows to European equities (are) now very similar as the percentage of asset under management to Japan equity inflows during the launch of the Bank of Japan’s QE in 2013.”
For their part, investors worldwide yanked $ 14.9 billion from US-focused stock funds, the sixth net withdrawals within the past seven weeks, BofA added. – Reuters