The traditional crisis playbook is officially being ignored. According to the latest BofA Global Research report, the escalating Middle East conflict and surging energy prices didn’t trigger a panic—they triggered a massive, opportunistic buying spree.
💰 THE GREAT RISK ROTATION:
- The Massive Inflows: A staggering $62.2 billion flowed into global stocks, with U.S. equities alone absorbing $47.1 billion (the biggest weekly inflow since December). Cash grabbed $23.5B, bonds took $10.2B, and crypto saw $1B. Meanwhile, energy funds clocked their 17th consecutive week of inflows.
- The Shocking Outflows: In a bizarre twist during a geopolitical crisis, investors dumped $4.5 billion from gold (its largest outflow since October).
- The Credit Squeeze: High-yield “junk” bonds hemorrhaged $5.2 billion, and Emerging Markets (EM) suffered a brutal combined $8.1 billion exit across both debt and equities.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: This is a highly polarized market. Instead of hoarding gold, institutional capital is aggressively buying the U.S. equity dip and chasing the oil/gas surge. However, the aggressive dumping of junk bonds and EM assets reveals a hidden truth: while investors are extremely greedy for top-tier U.S. stocks, they are absolutely terrified of lower-quality credit and emerging market vulnerability.
👇 Macro & Equity Investors: Is dumping gold during a major Middle East conflict to buy the U.S. stock dip a brilliant contrarian move, or the ultimate sign of market complacency?
