U.S.-listed ETFs attracted nearly $19 billion during the week ended Aug. 8, with fixed income approaches decisively leading investor allocations, according to data from Etf.com.
Bond ETFs lured $15.3 billion, which was approximately seven times more than the $2.2 billion invested in equities. This pattern mirrored an unmistakable desire for defensive positioning as market sentiment for Federal Reserve rate cutting intensifies.
SGOV ETF is seeing remarkable inflows. Track its prices live.
Rate Cut Bets Take Center Stage
The move follows growing belief that the Fed will start to ease monetary policy as early as September. Information from the CME FedWatch tool indicates futures markets now giving over a 94% chance of a quarter-point rate cut. Investors are seen front-running that choice, with fixed income instruments, particularly short-term Treasury exposure, hugely benefiting from a lower-rate scenario.
Bond yields were mostly unchanged during the week, with the 10-year Treasury yield sitting in the mid-3% area and short-term yields elevated but stable. A policy rate cut would tend to close the spread between short- and long-term yields to the advantage of Treasuries and corresponding ETF holders.
Also Read: Fed Rate-Cut Chorus Grows Louder: Could This Be A Breakout Moment For Growth ETFs?
Short-Duration Treasuries in Demand
Top fixed income inflows were the iShares 0–3 Month Treasury Bond ETF (NYSE:SGOV), with $2.3 billion, and the SPDR Bloomberg 1–3 Month T-Bill ETF (NYSE:BIL), with $1.6 billion. Both of these funds are popular with investors that want liquidity and stability without extreme interest rate risk. These products are frequently being employed as cash management tools, with yields that still capture the Fed’s high policy rate but circumvent price volatility associated with longer-term maturities.
Other fixed income winners of note were the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:TLT), which has been all over the map lately but keeps raking in money from investors hoping to capitalize on capital gains if long-term yields drop following a Fed turn.
Selective Equity Buying
Though most of the flows were directed into bonds, some equity ETFs continued to enjoy attention. The Communication Services Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLC) led all equity products with $3.8 billion in new money. Sector strength has been fueled by ongoing strength in heavyweight members Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) and Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL)(NASDAQ:GOOG), both of which have enjoyed strong advertising revenue and AI-fueled growth stories.
The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:VOO) was next with $3.3 billion of inflows, indicating that investors are still ready to put money into broad equity exposure even as they move into a defensive tilt on overall allocations. The S&P 500 toyed with record highs for the week but was just short of breaking through.
Conversely, some well-known equity ETFs suffered redemptions, especially in the small-cap and emerging markets space, which are more vulnerable to concerns about global growth and changes in interest rate policy.
Macro Backdrop Reinforces Defensive Tilt
The bond preference over stock in last week’s flows is a sign of larger market caution. While major indexes trade at or near historic peaks, geopolitical tensions, uneven economic readings, and the uncertain trajectory of inflation still hang over the outlook.
A September rate cut would represent a shift away from the Fed’s tight policy, which has been in effect for over two years. While cheap borrowing may add a tailwind to risk assets, the action would also indicate that the central bank believes there is a necessity to prop up growth, perhaps as a response to a weakening labor market or other economic challenges.
In this context, short Treasuries and other low-duration fixed income strategies are seen as a means of getting favorable yields today while still having flexibility for portfolio rebalancing if market conditions change.
If the Fed does cut as most anticipate, fixed-income ETFs, especially those with longer duration, might profit from price appreciation, and equities might experience renewed support from declining discount rates. If the central bank does decide to stand pat, the trade might reverse rather promptly, emphasizing the event-driven nature of the current positioning.
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This article Bond ETFs Outshine Equities In Weekly Flows As Rate Cut Bets Build originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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