ADVERTISEMENT

The Dash for Cash May Be Starting to Reverse With Stocks on Mend

The Dash for Cash May Be Starting to Reverse With Stocks on Mend

(Bloomberg) -- Ten days into January, there are signs the investor appetite for cash that surged last quarter is easing, suggesting the stabilization in equities is starting to erode demand for safer investments.

Investors pulled a record $745 million from a Vanguard exchange-traded fund that tracks short-term bond investments on Tuesday. While tiny compared with the $165 billion that flowed into money market funds during November and December, it comes off the back of a renewed appetite for risky assets -- global shares are up 8 percent since Christmas Day.

The Dash for Cash May Be Starting to Reverse With Stocks on Mend

Cash investments have offered investors a degree of safety amid worries about a slowdown in global growth. While recession fears are overdone in the eyes of many, Goldman Sachs this week still recommended that investors lift cash allocations, which the bank’s strategists described as historically low. November and December together marked the biggest two-month flows into money-market funds since 2008.

The Dash for Cash May Be Starting to Reverse With Stocks on Mend

After a rocky 2018, U.S. stocks have rallied and bonds steadied as investors scale back their expectations for Federal Reserve tightening.

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Haigh in Sydney at ahaigh1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Cormac Mullen

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.