Canadians continue to sell foreign stocks: StatsCan

Domestic investors dumped offshore securities while foreign investors added Canadian corporate debt

stock market down

Canadian investors continued to pare back their holdings of foreign securities in February, Statistics Canada reports.

According to the national statistical agency, domestic investors shed $9.7 billion worth of foreign holdings in February, which followed an $11.4-billion divestment in January.

In particular, investors sold off foreign equities again in February. Investors dumped $11.5 billion worth of foreign stocks in the month, led by $9.4 billion in U.S. equities, StatsCan said.

The selling of equities was moderated by investors adding $1.8 billion worth of foreign debt in February, primarily U.S. corporate debt.

At the same time, foreign investors added $7.4 billion in Canadian securities in February, led by corporate bond buying.

StatsCan reported that offshore investors added $18.2 billion in Canadian corporate bonds in February. Yet this was somewhat offset by a record $9.1 billion in sales of federal money market instruments.

Foreign investors also trimmed the Canadian equity holdings by $1.0 billion in February, up from $641 million in January.

Overall, the combination of foreign buying and Canadian investors selling resulted in a $17.1-billion net inflow to the Canadian economy in February.