Biggest inflows to U.S. large caps since April - BAML

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Claire Milhench

(Reuters) - U.S. large cap stocks attracted their biggest inflows since April in the week Wednesday to Wednesday, of America Merril Lynch (BAML) data showed on Friday, as investors eyed progress on long-awaited U.S. cuts.

The planned overhaul will slash the U.S. corporate rate to 21 percent, helping to fuel a burst of growth in 2018 according to the U.S. Federal Reserve. It also cheered up investors who have been betting on expansionary U.S. policies all year. [nL1N1OD0RJ] [nW1N1MT00C]

U.S. equities pulled in $7.8 billion, with U.S. large caps accounting for $7.6 billion of inflows, the data showed.

The inflows were broad-based across sectors and styles, with U.S. growth stocks attracting $3 billion and U.S. value equities $2.5 billion, the strongest inflows since March 2017.

U.S. stock markets <.SPX> have powered to record highs in December, also supported by robust economic data and falling unemployment.

said that U.S. small business, manufacturing, homebuilders and consumer confidence were at their strongest in aggregate since the early 1980s, consistent with 5-6 percent U.S. real GDP growth.

Coupled with this, rate expectations remain extraordinarily low, with only 81 basis points of tightening from the U.S. Federal Reserve seen over the next three years, said.

"(The) Big Risk remains the absence of Main St inflation inducing Wall St inflation (ie bubble), which in turn becomes a driver for a big tightening of financial conditions and volatility," the bank's analysts said.

At its meeting this week, the Fed raised rates by a quarter a percent as expected, but expressed concerns about sluggish inflation, suggesting there was no need to accelerate the pace of increases. [nW1N1MT00C]

In total, global equities attracted $8.7 billion and global bonds pulled in $1.2 billion. said this coincided with U.S. equities at an all-time high in November versus U.S. government bonds, exceeding the previous peak in December 1999.

Within fixed income, investment grade corporate bond remained in favour, attracting $2.7 billion, but high yield bonds saw outflows for a seventh straight week, losing $2.4 billion.

Emerging market debt also suffered their largest redemptions in 46 weeks, losing a modest $300 million.

(Reporting by Claire Milhench; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, December 15 2017. 19:10 IST