European investors remain focused on bonds

New data from Lipper and The European Fund and Asset Management Association shows that bonds remain very popular across the European mutual fund spectrum.

European investors remain focused on bonds

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According to the Lipper funds flow data for May, European investors poured €35.3bn into long term mutual funds in May, with €18.6bn of those flows heading into bond funds.

The second best category, were mixed-asset products with €9.7bn of inflows. Equity funds brought up the rear with €6.2bn.

Indeed, according to the group, the only product type that saw net outflows in May were commodity funds, which saw €0.4bn in redemptions.

Within the long-term fund space, Lipper said: “Asset allocation products (+ €6.1bn) were once again the best-selling asset class, followed by emerging market bonds (+€3.4bn) and equities emerging markets (+€2.8bn) as well as mixed-asset conservative funds (+€2.8bn) and bonds EUR funds (+ €2.1bn).

According to EFAMA, net sales of UCITS remained firm in May, totalling €43bn, but fell month-month-on-month from April’s €62bn figure.

This decline, the group said: “can be attributed to the reduction in net sales of long-term funds, coupled with increased net outflows from money market funds.”

While bond fund sales were down month-on-month, net sales of bond funds remained high at €20bn in May. (April: €27bn) Especially when compared to equities which saw net fund sales halve to €27bn. Balanced funds attracted net inflows of 17bn, down from €20bn in April.

Bernard Delbecque, director of economics and research at EFAMA commented: “Net sales of long-term UCITS remained at elevated levels in May as expectations mounted of interest rate cuts by the ECB to stimulate growth and head off deflation.”
 

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