Subscribe

Stocks see third-largest outflow ever

man-holding-head-on-trading-floor

Stock funds bled $25.8 billion in the week through Sept. 23, according to the most recent data

The risk-off sentiment on Wall Street fueled the third-worst weekly outflow on record from U.S. equities, with technology shares falling out of favor.

U.S. stock funds bled $25.8 billion in the week through Sept. 23, according to Bank of America Corp. and EPFR Global data, in a reversal from the previous week’s biggest inflow in more than two years. Investors exited the hottest sector of the rebound, pulling the most money out of tech funds since June 2019.

While traders were buying the dip just a week ago, sentiment has switched firmly to risk off in recent sessions, with pessimism seeping in about the prospect of further fiscal stimulus to support the world’s biggest economy.

The S&P 500 Index is on course for its fourth straight weekly drop, its longest losing streak in more than a year. That’s fueling U.S. equity underperformance versus Asia and Europe in September.

In a flight to haven assets, investors are pulling out of equities as well as cash to put their money into debt and gold. Bond funds received $1.3 billion in the most recent week, while the precious metal attracted $1.4 billion in inflows — the most since the flash crash in early August — according to the Bank of America report. Stocks overall bled $22.8 billion, the most since March.

Still, strategists led by Michael Hartnett view this month’s market moves as a “healthy rather than dangerous correction.”

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Ether ETF aspirants take the starting blocks ahead of anticipated July approval

Earlier whispers of a fourth-of-July greenlight now look premature as the SEC gives applicants a new deadline.

Hints of jobs slowdown put Fed on the alert

Hints of impending weakness in the labor market add to the central bank's list of risks to manage.

Wall Street weighs impact on bonds if Trump wins

Strategists urge investors to hedge against inflation.

More American homeowners locked into mortgage rates above 5%

Older loans at lower rates are being replaced by costlier borrowing.

Take profits on five-year Treasuries now says JPMorgan

Selling pressures are elevated due to multiple risk events.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print