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McGeever: Foreign demand for US assets may not be dead just yet.

McGeever: Foreign demand for US assets may not be dead just yet.

The financial markets are at an important crossroads as the first quarter comes to an end. The first stages of a global shift in investment flows could be underway, as we see a sharp decline in the demand for U.S.-based assets from overseas. It's possible, however, that this is just a temporary pause in the story of 'U.S. The narrative of 'exceptionalism' has many more chapters.

According to official Treasury International Capital Flows data, the net sales of U.S. equity by foreign central banks in January totaled $28 billion. The private sector sold all U.S. assets for a total of $74.8 billion.

The official sector sold U.S. stocks at the fastest pace ever in one month. Private investors also had the largest monthly outflows of U.S. assets in the past year.

This sudden reversal of flows is a major factor in explaining the underperformance of U.S. stock prices compared to the rest of world this year. The gap between the two has widened to 15 percentage points over the last few weeks.

One month is not enough to establish a trend, and many months of similar flows will be needed to turn the tide, or, more accurately, tsunami, of foreign capital which has flooded the U.S. market in recent years.

TIC data show that net private capital inflows to U.S. bonds and stocks last year totaled $1.6 trillion, after a net inflow in the previous year of $668 billion. This is net purchases by overseas investors, and net sales of foreign assets made by U.S. Investors.

It is worth repeating the total. Private sector investors have invested a total of $3.25 trillion in U.S. assets over the past three calendar years. Goldman Sachs reports that at the end last year, foreign investors owned 18% U.S. stock. This is a record high share dating back to 1945.

This pace of net inflows, at an average of over $1 trillion per year, was unlikely to continue. Does that mean the pace of January's selling will continue? Not necessarily.

PARADIGM SHIFT

David Kostin, Goldman Sachs’ chief U.S. equity strategy, and his team believe that foreign investors are likely to continue buying U.S. stocks this year. They will be attracted by the lower dollar, the attractive prices due the recent correction and the unmatched liquidity of U.S. stock markets.

The report predicts that overseas investors will remain just as engaged this year as last, spending a total of $300 billion as opposed to $304 billion by 2024. However, they do mention that "elevated economic and political uncertainty create elevated uncertainty about that forecast."

Steven Englander, Standard Chartered’s head of G10 strategy, believes that the demand for U.S. assets is likely to remain high as long as the U.S. has a flexible financial system and a commitment to property rights.

Even if U.S. equity prices continue to fall, the attractiveness of the market will not be affected, he says, as long as the positives are still there.

The TIC flow reports are released at a later date, so the outflows in January do not reflect the significant market changes seen over recent weeks. The reports for February and March could also show large outflows.

Foreign investors are pulling away from U.S. investments for a number of reasons - including stretched valuations, market consolidation, China's DeepSeek AI model, Germany's historic fiscal U-turn and concerns about the Trump administration's foreign and trade policy agendas.

It is still unclear whether recent changes in investment flows are temporary or represent a real paradigm shift. The next few weeks will be crucial.

(source: Reuters)