Shivers run through Europe and Japan as supply chains rattle

The Japanese economy’s 3% contraction during the third quarter and the latest spike in natural gas prices pushed supply chain issues to the top of a lengthy list of investor concerns going into the second half of November.

In the case of natural gas, the supply chain linking Europe with an increasingly assertive Russia is back in the spotlight. EPFR-tracked Europe Equity Funds posted their sixth outflow in the past nine weeks and Energy Sector Funds experienced their heaviest redemptions since mid-August as Russian troops built up along the Ukrainian border, Germany suspended certification of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline and the price of natural gas jumped to a four-week high.

Tight energy supplies are a headwind for Japan, which imports nearly all of the oil it uses, and bread-and-butter supply chain issues ranging from lock downs in China to global shipping backlogs are also taking a toll. Japan Equity Funds recorded their biggest outflow since early March during the week ending Nov. 17.

Graph depicting the 'Quarter-to-date, 2021 flows, in percentage of Assets under management, for G10 and BRIC country fund groups'

Graph depicting the 'Top 3 constituents' aggregated cumulative flow momentum of each MSCI China thematic indexes'.

Did you find this useful? Get our EPFR Insights delivered to your inbox.

Related Posts

Tiptoeing into the final Fed meeting of 2025

Tiptoeing into the final Fed meeting of 2025

On the surface, the third week of October was another good one for EPFR-tracked mutual funds and ETFs. Bond Funds took in another $17.2 billion and remained on track to set a second consecutive full-year inflow record, Equity Funds collectively absorbed $14.1 billion and Alternative Funds posted their third largest weekly inflow in over two decades.

Going for gold in the second half of October

Going for gold in the second half of October

On the surface, the third week of October was another good one for EPFR-tracked mutual funds and ETFs. Bond Funds took in another $17.2 billion and remained on track to set a second consecutive full-year inflow record, Equity Funds collectively absorbed $14.1 billion and Alternative Funds posted their third largest weekly inflow in over two decades.

Better, More Actionable Insights

Let us show you how EPFR can create value for your specific strategy