Bond ETFs seeing 'huge flows': Strategist

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Investors have been flooding into bond ETFs, says VettaFi Financial Futurist Dave Nadig. When it comes to equities, ETF investors are flocking to U.S. stocks in a bid to chase the performance of the 'Magnificent Seven,' Nadig says. Overall, Nadig tells Yahoo Finance Live that some investors are "trapped in this risk on/risk off model where they're trying to figure out if they want to be aggressive and bet on this economy, staying strong, staying out of a real recession or whether they are trying to be more defensive," describing it as a "barbell approach."

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Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: According to our next guest, the ETF market is still going strong with $135 billion in new assets and about $200 billion in equities, with tech and growth dominating the sector. As part of the ETF Report brought to you by Invesco QQQ, let's bring in financial futurist David Nadig. David, it's good to talk to you today. So money is still flowing into ETFs. People aren't necessarily staying on the sidelines. Where's that going?

DAVE NADIG: Well, it's been an interesting year because we've had $1 trillion in money market mutual funds. That's been sort of this overhang of money on the sidelines, that classic phrase we always use. But inside the ETF market, what we've seen is a really strong bond market. We've seen huge flows into everything, from 30-year treasuries to CLOs and junk bonds. Almost throughout the spectrum, we've seen strong, strong flows. And at the same time, we've had about $200 billion in flows into equities, most of that in the US.

A lot of that is chasing the sort of indefatigable performance of the Magnificent Seven. It's been really hard to beat the S&P 500 again this year, up 15%, 16%. But despite that, we've seen a lot of flows into some more interesting pockets of the market. So it's a strong market. Investors are still participating. It's not going to be a record year in terms of ETF flows, but it's going to be close. And I think given what we've seen over the last two years, that's impressive by itself.

RACHELLE AKUFFO: So then, David, it's Rachelle here. Does it make sense that we're seeing these ETF flows into-- still into tech and growth, when a lot of people are sort of flooding into these safe havens, even if you look at gold's performance today? Help us make sense of why we're seeing this divergence.

DAVE NADIG: Well, some of it is that folks are really trapped in this risk-on, risk-off model, where they're trying to figure out whether they want to be aggressive and bet on this economy, staying strong, staying out of a real recession, or whether they're trying to be more defensive. And honestly, it's a bit of a barbell approach. Obviously, that money market money is very much in the risk-off camp. But meanwhile, when you look at where money is starting to get allocated inside the equity sleeve of ETFs, it's things like defensive income and small cap value.