LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Investors turned more cautious in the week to Wednesday, according to data from Bank of America, as a run of data prompted many to raise their forecasts for how high the U.S. Federal Reserve will take interest rates.
BofA Global Research's weekly "Flow Show", released on Friday, showed the largest outflows from technology funds since September, the largest outflows from emerging market debt funds in 14 weeks, and the largest outflows from junk debt funds in eight weeks.
Stronger-than-expected data on U.S. employment, retail sales and inflation this month have pushed up expectations for how much higher the Fed will need to raise rates, a development that is typically bad news for riskier stocks and emerging market assets.
BofA analysts said the data means it is "mission very much unaccomplished for the Fed" despite its 450 basis points of monetary tightening in this cycle so far.
"Fed tightening always 'breaks' something," they add.
Emerging market debt funds saw outflows of $700 million, the largest weekly outflow in 14 weeks, according to the report which attributed the decline to debt investors reducing risk.
High yield - or junk - debt saw outflows of $2.6 billion, the largest in eight weeks, and tech funds had $1.1 billion of outflows, the most since September.
Elsewhere, there were $5.5 billion inflows to bonds, $1 billion inflows to cash, $300 million to equities and $45 million to gold.
Equity markets have largely shrugged off fears of the impact of higher for longer rates, so far.
The tech heavy Nasdaq (.IXIC) is set for a weekly gain and is trading near the five-month high hit in early February, and France's benchmark CAC 40 index (.FCHI) hit a record high on Thursday boosted by solid results at some of the country's biggest companies, including luxury names and energy firms.
However, BofA analysts said: "Remember 'buy humiliation, sell hubris' ... this time last year, likes of Moderna, Tesla, Apple widely viewed as "must-own" stocks; this year, it's likes of Exxon, Raytheon, Hermes ... always hedge hubris."