“Extraordinary” flows into emerging market funds
Funds dedicated to emerging markets posted $2.2bn in inflows during the week ending April 22, the strongest streak for the asset class since May 2008, Merrill Lynch’s Michael Hartnett said in a note released on Friday.
This week marks the seventh consecutive week of inflows for EM funds, which analysts at Deutsche Bank called “extraordinary”, noting:
between June 2008 and March 2009 there have not been more than two weeks of inflows in a row. This cumulated inflows in the last seven weeks for all EM equity funds amounts to nearly US$4.0bn.
Flows into exchange-traded funds continued to dominate; over the past five weeks EM-dedicated ETFs have seen inflows of $6bn, compared with $3.7bn for plain vanilla long-only funds, Merrill said.
Investors were also sanguine on Asia, with inflows of around $0.9bn.
The strong appetite for EM funds seen this month triggered a “sell” signal on the asset class at Merrill, a call which remains in place at the investment bank:
Trading rule says inflows in excess of 1.5% of total AUM in 4-week period = sell. Past 4-weeks of inflow = 2.9% of AUM so trading rule remains in “sell” territory
Following rally from March 2nd low, MSCI EM stalled in the 600-650 range since trading rule said “sell” 4 weeks ago i.e. upward EM momentum arrested
"Positive flows into emerging markets trigger a “sell” at Merrill
Dedicated emerging market equity funds posted a fourth consecutive week of positive flows during the week ended April 1, according to data from fund-tracker EPFR.
Investors poured just over $1bn into these funds during the week, equivalent to almost 0.4 per cent of total assets. This is the first four-week run of positive flows since May 2008.
Here’s a break down, via Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank data:
* Global EM funds saw $0.9bn inflow, Asia saw $0.4bn inflow
* EMEA and LatAm funds see small redemptions
* Flows for developed markets were mixed as US funds (ex. ETFs) and Western European funds (ex. ETFs) posted marginal inflows equivalent to 0.03% of AuM and 0.02% of AuM respectively.
* Japan funds (ex. ETFs) registered outflows equivalent to 1.26% of AuM.
* EM bond funds, which witnessed positive flows last week, registered outflows equivalent to 0.36 per cent of total assets
Merrill Lynch’s international investment strategist Michael Hartnett said the pace of inflows had triggered a “sell” according to an internal trading rule, although he advised caution (emphasis FT Alphaville’s):
Trading rule says: inflows in excess of 1.5% of total AUM in 4-week period = sell
Inflows in past 4 weeks = 1.7% of total AUM so sell signal is only just triggered
Important to note these sell signals work with lag (unlike buy signals): four big sell signals in April ‘06, July ‘07, Sept ‘07 & April ‘08 all worked with 2-4 week lag, so could be early


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