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HAKINMHAN

While the U.S. banking sector wobbled last month after the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, Canadian ETF investors were looking for buying opportunities.

According to a report from National Bank Financial, financial-sector ETFs in Canada brought in $1.4 billion last month.

“We noticed most of the flows for these ETFs came after March 8, when news of Silicon Valley Bank’s sudden collapse dominated headlines,” the report said.

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“Canadian financial-sector ETFs surged in demand as investors either sought buying opportunities or financial exposure with minimal regional banks in the mix.”

After plunging initially, the S&P/TSX Composite Banks index bottomed out on March 24 and is roughly back to where it started the year.

In the U.S., where the S&P 500 Financials index is still down almost 6% for the year after dropping nearly 10% in March, investors pulled out US$0.8 billion from financial-sector ETFs last month, according to a separate National Bank report.

However, despite the net outflow for the financial-sector as a whole, US$1.7 billion flowed into regional bank ETFs, which fell by almost 30% in March, National Bank said.

The $1.4 billion that flowed into Canadian financial-sector ETFs contributed to nearly $7 billion in total ETF inflows last month. More than half ($3.7 billion) went into equity ETFs, while fixed-income funds brought in $3.3 billion.

Canadian government bond ETFs accounted for $1.2 billion of the fixed-income inflows, while money market ETFs had another strong month bringing in $854 million.

Crypto funds saw $287 million in redemptions.

March was the best month this year for Canadian ETFs, after net redemptions in January and inflows of $4 billion in February. Canadian ETFs have taken in $10.7 billion for the year to date.

ETF assets in Canada totalled $337.6 billion at the end of March.