"US retail investors flee to savings
By Deborah Brewster in New York
Published: March 25 2009 23:37 | Last updated: March 25 2009 23:37
US retail investors poured close to $250bn (€184bn) into bank accounts in the first months of this year, sharply accelerating a flight to safety as they continued to flee volatile stock markets.
Bank savings deposits rose by $246bn to a record $4,343bn in the nine weeks to March 9, according to data from the Federal Reserve. This is more than the whole of 2008, in which savings deposits rose by $229bn.
The big plunge into cash comes in spite of repeated government attempts to restart frozen fixed-income markets and restore confidence in the financial system.
It is not clear where all the deposits came from but in the first two months of the year investors pulled $20bn from stock mutual funds – almost half the total $43bn redeemed during the whole of 2008 – as they appeared to lose confidence in stock markets, according to data from Financial Research Corporation.
During the first nine weeks of the year, investors pulled a small amount – $15bn – from savings accounts with a period of notice, in an apparent indication they were reluctant to lock up cash for even short periods of time.
Charles Biderman, chief executive of TrimTabs, a research group, said: “Net flows into savings have gone into only two places – bank savings and US Treasuries. Both . . . offer extremely low yields with a high degree of safety.
“During an economy where equity prices are down about 50 per cent and home prices down about 30 per cent or so, is there any question as to why money is flowing only into the safest bets?”
Historically, money flows more strongly into bank accounts when stock markets are falling. In 2005 and 2006, when US equities rose, retail investors put less than $100bn into savings and current accounts each year.
The previous record year for a rise in bank deposits was 2002, following the dotcom boom, when deposits rose by $465bn. “During hard times people worry about return of principal, not return on principal,” Mr Biderman said.
As retail investors seek cash, hedge fund managers are placing big bets on gold in the belief that paper currencies will be debased.
The Federal Reserve tracks assets held in bank accounts, not actual inflows. But with interest rates at typical savings accounts hovering below 2 per cent, the rise in deposits – which includes current accounts – is overwhelmingly due to an inflow of new money rather than returns.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009"
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