Turbulent equity markets and lofty bond yields has cash back in high demand.
Nearly $2.5 billion flooded into the $23 billion iShares Short Treasury Bond ETF (ticker SHV) last week, data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the biggest weekly influx for SHV, which holds bonds maturing in one year or less, since the depths of the pandemic in March 2020.
With yields on short-dated Treasury bills hovering near multidecade highs, cash is enticing investors once again after record demand in 2022. Stubbornly high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s resolve to squash it has fueled a repricing of interest-rate hike expectations in recent weeks, roiling stocks and bonds alike. The haven appeal of cash-like positions combined with reliable returns means investors have an attractive place to wait out the volatility, according to Citi Global Wealth Management’s Kristen Bitterly.
“The number one question that we get, especially once that six-month T-bill crossed over that 5% threshold, is why wouldn’t I sit this out and hang out in T-bills?” Bitterly, head of North America investments at Citi, said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Friday. “We don’t think there’s really any need to stretch in terms of yield. You don’t have to go into high yield, you can certainly take advantage of those short-duration T-bills.”