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Investors Pull Cash from ETFs in March

Traders Magazine Online News, April 19, 2018

John D'Antona Jr.

Beware the Ides of March.

Investors were keenly aware that exposure to exchange-traded funds might hurt them amid increased volatility and pulled cash out of them last month. The heightened volatility during the first quarter marked the worst quarterly return for global equities since Q3 2015. And according to the latest ETF report from State Street Global Advisors, ETF investors continued to trim their equity exposure, as the ETF industry experienced a second consecutive month of outflows ($-1.7 billion) in March. Within equities, financials experience the largest single amount of outflows – $1.7 billion – as the federal Reserve raised interest rates.

This marks the first time since February 2008 that US listed ETFs had back-to-back months of outflows (outflows in February 2018 totaled $10B).

However, despite posting outflows in two of the first three months of 2018, the ETF industry is still off to its second best start to a year on record thanks to January’s record-setting $76 billion of inflows, SSGA’s Matthew Bartolini, Head of SPDR Americas Research told Traders Magazine. Aside from equities, fixed income ETFs continued to enjoy healthy gains by garnering a fresh $5.3 billion in flows during March.

February marked the US ETF industry’s first monthly outflow in two years. The $1.7 billion in outflows seen last month marks the first consecutive monthly outflows since February 2008. Thankfully, if history is any guide, we could see relief in April. In the past 25 years, the industry has seen three consecutive monthly outflows only once, from December 2002 to February 2003.

“It might seem doom and gloom that two of the three months in 2018 have seen outflows, but would you believe that even so this is still the second-best start to a year on record,” Bartolini said. “January’s record-setting inflows of $76 billion mean that the industry has still seen $66 billion of inflows this year, bested only by 2017’s $134 billion first quarter haul.”

Overall, SSGA reported flow patterns in March were similar to those seen in February. Outflows were again driven by equities, as the S&P 500 has posted its worst trailing two-month performance since August-September 2015. Fixed-income funds again saw inflows on a monthly basis, though last month’s haul of $5 billion was again significantly lower than the segment’s $9 billion monthly average over the past two years.

While there were outflows in equities overall, they were largely focused on US exposures as the international rotation continued, Bartolini continued.

“The flow patterns, however, indicate a preference for dialing down risk within the international bucket. Diversified broad-based funds were preferred over targeted region or single country exposures,” he said. “Flows to developed international funds rose 63% month on month to $6.8 billion, overtaking US equity funds for the leadership position in geographical flows year-to-date. Emerging markets continued to see strong inflows, taking in an additional $1.2 billion in March.”

Diving deeper, the Technology sector took in the second highest sectors flows in March.

“Back in April of 2016, it was disappointing results from tech titan Apple that dragged the entire sector down. This time the plunge in prices is likely headline driven, fueling profit taking after the sector has risen by almost 40% in the past 15 months,” Bartolini said.

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