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US dividend funds see biggest quarterly outflows in two and a half years

April 08, 2023 00:00:00


US dividend funds have faced steep outflows this year after strong inflows last year as investors rush to safer money market funds and bank deposits, providing high returns without much risk, reports Reuters.

Interest rates on short-tenor bonds have risen this year on expectations that the US Federal Reserve would continue to hike interest rates to combat inflation pressures, after raising them seven times in the last year.

According to Refinitiv data, US dividend funds witnessed an outflow of $5.6 billion in the first quarter of this year, the first in 10 quarters.

On the other hand, US money market funds secured a massive $391.5 billion inflow in the first quarter, the biggest in three years.

"The yields on money market funds became much more attractive after investors received their December 2022 statements in January of this year and saw that even their dividend paying stocks were down quite a bit while money market funds at that point were seeing yields near 4+," said Ayako Yoshioka, senior portfolio manager at Wealth Enhancement Group.

"As long as the stability and income generated from money market funds remain attractive relative to stocks, the outflows may continue this year."

The yield on the 3-month US Treasury bill, in which money market funds invest the most, touched 5.061 per cent on March 9, near a 16-year high, and was currently trading at about 4.8 per cent. That compares with the large and mid-cap U.S. companies' average dividend yield of just 1.8 per cent, according to Refinitiv data.

Also, the underperformance of the financial and energy sectors, down about 6 per cent each during the first quarter and are major sources of dividends to US investors, has contributed to the steep outflows over the first three months of 2023.

Josh Duitz, deputy head of global equities at Abrdn, said investors have been selling dividend funds as they chased stocks in the NASDAQ Composite index, which outperformed in the first quarter, but they tend to pay low or no dividends.

In the first quarter, the iShares Core High Dividend ETF saw an outflow of $1.77 billion, while Vanguard Dividend Appreciation Index ETF and TD US Blue Chip Equity Investor Series fund witnessed $1.02 billion and $645 million worth of withdrawals, respectively.


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