Talking Points:
As the week draws to a close, so too does the third quarter. Marked by robust strength in US equities and the 10th anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ collapse, the third quarter saw the most growth in the S&P 500 since the fourth quarter of 2013.
S&P 500 Daily Price Chart June 2018 – October 2018
Despite the strong performance of US equities and general risk-on mood this week, investors moved funds from exchange traded funds with US exposure. As we have covered previously, SPY, VOO, and IVV track the performance of US large-cap corporations.
At the quarterly level, the three funds saw $157 billion in inflows. Compared to their cumulative market capitalizations (roughly $1 trillion) and the week-to-week changes, the change in exposure quite large. The second quarter saw a net inflow of $34 billion, a figure significantly dwarfed by the third quarters. The willingness to have US exposure suggests investors are still confident in the bull-market heading to the year’s end.
On a smaller scale, the three ETFs saw an aggregated $16.13 billion flow elsewhere for the week. After last week’s robust inflows it is not entirely surprising to see moderate outflows this week. Profit-taking could be a possible reason for the change, along with more attractive opportunities elsewhere.
QQQ ETF Price Chart 1-Year
One such opportunity was the tech-heavy NASDAQ. Of the three main US equity markets, NASDAQ was the sole market to post gains for the week. Incidentally or perhaps consequently, the NASDAQ tracking QQQ ETF saw net inflows. Year to date, the NASDAQ still outpaces all other indices, up roughly 11%.