May was just another month at the office for exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as investors continued pouring into ETFs. Data indicate that equity ETFs remain the primary destinations for investors, but fixed income funds are gathering assets at a rapid pace as well.
"First quarter flows notched a new all-time high, and now two months into Q2, flows are on pace to top $100 billion for the third straight quarter," said State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) in a note out Monday. "From a headline perspective it may look as if equity ETFs are the key cog in this well-oiled machine. However, while their flows are impressive, fixed income is once again the little engine that could." (See also: Don't Doubt the Data: Bond ETFs Will Keep Growing.)
Thanks to a spurt of $10 billion over the last five days of the month, equity ETFs added $20.4 billion in new assets in May, according to SSgA. Bond ETFs added $10.7 billion last month, making May the fourth month out of the past five in which bond ETFs have added $10 billion or more in new assets, notes SSgA.
With investors continuing to hunt for value, international ETFs are adding assets at a feverish pace. For example, the SPDR Euro STOXX 50 ETF (FEZ
SPDR EUROSTOX50 Shs of Benef Interest
FEZ
39.62
-0.65%
The SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Small Cap ETF (EWX
SPDR S&P EMkSC Shs
EWX
46.73
+0.24%
At the sector level, investors poured $1 billion into tech ETFs last month. Outside of that and the more than $500 million that was added to consumer discretionary ETFs in May, there was not much enthusiasm for sector ETFs last month. Of the nine other S&P 500 sectors, ETFs tracking just two – energy and industrials – saw May inflows, according to SSgA data. Conversely, investors raced for the exits with financial services and materials ETFs. (See also: Big Money Flows Into Big Tech ETFs.)

No comments:
Post a Comment