(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters. Repeats March 24 column on March 25 with
no changes. )
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida, March 24 (Reuters) - As the first
quarter draws to a close, financial markets are at a crossroads.
We could be seeing the early stages of a tectonic shift in
global investment flows, with a dramatic decline in demand for
U.S. assets from abroad. But it's also possible that this is
simply a pause and that the 'U.S. exceptionalism' narrative has
more chapters to go.
Net sales of U.S. equities by foreign central banks reached
$28 billion in January, and net sales of all U.S. assets by the
private sector totaled $74.8 billion, according to official
Treasury International Capital flows data.
These were, respectively, the fastest-ever pace of U.S. equity
selling by the official sector in a single month, and the
biggest monthly outflow of U.S. assets by private sector
investors in a year.
This abrupt reversal in flows goes a long way to explaining
the eye-opening underperformance of U.S. stocks against the rest
of the world so far this year. This gap has approached 15
percentage points in the past few weeks.
Of course, one month does not a trend make, and it will take
many more months of similar flows to reverse the tide - or more
accurately, the tsunami - of foreign capital that flooded into
U.S. markets in recent years.
TIC data shows that private sector net capital inflows into
U.S. stocks and bonds last year totaled $980 billion, following
a net inflow of $668 billion the year before and $1.6 trillion
in 2022. That's net purchases from overseas investors and net
selling of foreign assets by U.S. investors.
The total figure is worth repeating. In the last three
calendar years, private sector investors poured a net $3.25
trillion into U.S. assets. Little wonder that foreign investors
at the end of last year owned 18% of U.S. stocks, according to
Goldman Sachs. That's a record-high share going back to 1945.
At an average of more than $1 trillion a year, that pace of
net inflows was unlikely to be maintained. But does that mean
that January's pace of selling will persist? Not necessarily.
PARADIGM SHIFT?
Goldman Sachs' chief U.S. equity strategist David Kostin and his
team estimate that foreign investors will remain buyers of U.S.
equities this year, lured by the weaker dollar, attractive
prices due to the recent correction, and the unparalleled
liquidity of U.S. markets.
They reckon overseas investors will be just as committed this
year as they were last year, buying a net $300 billion compared
with $304 billion in 2024. They do note, however, that "elevated
political and economic uncertainty also create elevated
uncertainty around that forecast."
Appetite for U.S. assets will remain strong as long the U.S.
maintains an innovation-friendly tax system, flexible financial
system, commitment to property rights and a relatively low
regulatory burden, agrees Standard Chartered's head of G10 FX
strategy Steven Englander.
"Cyclical ups and downs in equity and other asset prices
would not erase this attractiveness in the long term, even if
the correction in U.S. equities continues, provided the
underlying positives remain in place," he says.
It is important to note that TIC flows reports are released
with a lag, meaning January's outflows don't account for the
notable market shifts seen in recent weeks. The February and
March reports could show massive outflows too.
There are good reasons why foreign investors have backed
away from U.S. assets in recent weeks - stretched valuations,
market concentration, the emergence of China's DeepSeek
artificial intelligence model, Germany's watershed fiscal
U-turn, and concern surrounding the Trump administration's trade
and foreign policy agendas.
This is all to say it remains unclear whether the recent
shift in investment flows is temporary or represents a true
paradigm shift. The next few months will be critical.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters.)