LONDON—Investors ploughed $14.9 billion into cash in the week to Wednesday and snapped up $1.8 billion of inflation protected U.S. Treasuries as markets suffered a major sell off, a round-up by BofA on flow number based on EPFR data showed on Friday. Fixed income markets attracted the smallest weekly inflow since March at $3.9 billion with investment grade securities attracting just $2.1 billion and both high-yield and emerging market bonds suffering outflow, the BofA report noted. Equities sucked in $13 billion with Japan stocks enjoying the best inflows since April 2019 at $4.3 billion and U.S. stocks gaining $71 million, while their European peers suffered a 1.3 billion outflow. “Late-60s/70s “stagflation” winners were real assets, real estate, commodities, volatility, cash, EM, all of which held their own vs inflation; losers were bonds, credit, equities, tech, all of which ultimately struggled,” strategist Michael Hartnett said in the note to clients. BofA …