BlackRock Global ETP Flows iShares ETF

BlackRock Global ETP Flows October 2022

BlackRock Global ETP Flows : Asset allocation conviction returned in October, with $111.5B of inflows into global ETPs – triple the amount added in September, and the first time since March that monthly ETP flows have surpassed $100B.

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Global ETP Flows October 2022


    Equities and fixed income in favour: equity flows increased from $31.6B to $79.0B in October, while fixed income allocations increased to $34.2B from $13.0B in September.

    Commodities selling persists: commodity ETPs recorded a further $4.4B of outflows in October – a sixth consecutive month of selling.

EM flying under the radar

Emerging market (EM) equity ETPs notched up a sixteenth consecutive month of inflows, with $7.3B added in October. While the majority went into APAC listed ETPs ($5.1B), investors also allocated to EMEA and US-listed ETPs ($1.8B), with flows going into both listing regions for the first time since June.

EM equity ETPs have gained $81.1B of inflows globally YTD, closely tracking the $90.6B added in 2021, which was a record year for EM equity flows. Under the surface, EMEA-listed flows are also on track to match 2021’s figure, with $11.7B YTD, vs. $12.3B in 2021.

At a more granular level, EMEA-listed flows show a pickup in buying of Korea ($0.4B) – the largest allocation on record for EMEA-listed Korean equity ETPs, albeit offset by selling out of other listing regions to leave global Korean equity flows flat on the month. Investors also returned to Brazil in the largest inflow month since June ($0.8B), despite the election at the end of the month adding an element of political uncertainty into Brazilian assets.

Conviction through precision

After sector flows dropped off in September, October saw a significant pickup, in line with the broad rise in equity flows. Tech ETP buying rebounded to the highest level since March ($6.1B), while financials notched up a second inflow month in three, with $1.6B added. Healthcare remained popular ($1.9B), while materials and utilities saw a reversal of fortunes: materials notched up a first inflow month since April ($0.4B), while utilities turned negative, with $1.3B out.

Energy has had a rollercoaster 2022: inflows across January to April were followed by five months of outflows, which finally showed signs of reversing with $1.6B added in October. This takes YTD net global flows into energy ETPs to $2.2B, compared to $23.4B across the whole of 2021.

Fixed income fixes up

Flows into fixed income ETPs surged to $34.2B in October – a 2.6x MoM increase vs. September ($13B), and the second-highest inflow month in 2022, closely behind May’s $35B of inflows. Rates flows slowed on a relative and absolute basis, driving just over 50% of fixed income flows (vs. 78% in September), with the headline buoyed instead by a pickup in credit flows.

With spreads at historic wides, relatively attractive yields, in our view, and market consensus that the impending policy-induced US recession is likely to be short and shallow, conviction in high yield (HY) credit accelerated. October saw $7.8B added to HY ETPs – the highest inflow month since April 2020 ($8.5B). Buying overwhelmingly favoured US HY exposures.

After outflows for most of the year totalling -$11.8B – on track to be the highest outflow year for the asset class – could these green shoots signal the start of a turnaround? Considering the volatility of credit flows YTD, it may be too early to call a decisive trend, in our view, but it’s certainly worth monitoring. Duration is also making a comeback in the rates space. After a record-breaking month for flows into front-end exposures in September ($19.2B), buying of long-term exposures surged to $6.7B in October – on track to be the third-highest inflow month on record.

EMEA continues to lead sustainable inflows

Sustainable ETP flows across Europe and the US in totalled $1.5B in October – the lowest level since May this year. While European-listed ETPs saw $3.5B of inflows for the month, the total across the two regions was brought down by the outflows from US-listed sustainable ETPs (-$2.0B). Almost all of these outflows came from ESG optimised equity strategies, led by US market exposures. The only strategy that saw inflows among US-listed products in October was climate exclusive equity, with a net buy of $82m.

The European market, on the other hand, saw notable inflows into ESG optimised equity strategies, totalling $955m. The majority of this went into European market exposures, while the same strategy saw outflows from US equity exposures. With $1.2B of inflows, ESG best in-class strategies saw the largest buying in October. The majority of this went into EUR corporate bond exposures. ESG screened strategies also registered inflows ($621m), albeit down from the levels seen in previous months.

Source: ETFWorld.co.uk


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