Global investors were big buyers in money market funds for a seventh straight period in the week to 12 April after a strong US jobs report heightened expectations that the US Federal Reserve would raise interest rates in May.
Funds in the global money market drew a net US$40.83 billion worth of inflows compared with a net US$61.12 billion worth of purchases in the previous week, data from Refinitiv Lipper showed.
Money market funds continue “to benefit from high U.S. real rates that forces deposits out of the banking system,” brokerage Jefferies said in a note to clients.
If the fed funds rate is discounted by core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) inflation, the real interest rate is currently a positive 0.275%.
The yield on the 3-month U.S. Treasury bill , in which money market funds invest the most, surged to near a 16-year high of 5.175% on Thursday.
Global equity funds, meanwhile, obtained US$545 million, marking their first weekly inflow in three weeks.
Investors purchased communication services and financial sector funds of US$974 million and US$664 million, respectively, while selling a net US$845 million worth of healthcare funds.
Global bond funds saw inflows dipping to US$3.43 billion in the week from US$16.45 billion worth of net buying a week ago.
Inflows in government bond funds slipped to a nine-week low of US$2.33 billion, while high-yield funds faced outflows of US$172 million. Global short- and medium-term bond funds received US$1.57 billion, the biggest inflow in five weeks.
Among commodities, investors purchased US$402 million of precious metal funds in their fifth consecutive week of net buying, while disposing of a net US$147 million worth of energy funds.
Data for 23,942 emerging market funds showed equity funds received a third weekly inflow, worth US$227 million, while bond funds had US$913 million worth of outflows after two weekly net purchases in a row.