Global equity funds gained a fourth weekly inflow in five weeks in the week through Jan. 22 spurred by optimism for US Federal Reserve rate cuts following cooling inflation and President Donald Trump’s plans for extensive AI infrastructure spending.
According to LSEG Lipper data, global equity funds attracted a net USD 7.42 billion worth of inflows during the weeks after having lost about USD 4.3 billion in outflows in the prior week.
The MSCI World index has rallied nearly 5%, since the announcement of the inflation report on Jan. 15, while Europe’s continent-wide STOXX 600 index hit a record high of 530.55 on Wednesday.
By region, investors snapped up a massive USD 6.69 billion worth of European equity funds. They also acquired Asian funds to the tune of USD 2.84 billion but ditched US funds worth USD 3.2 billion on a net basis.
Sectoral funds were popular as these funds garnered a net USD 4.86 billion worth of inflows, the largest since Nov. 13, 2024. Tech, financials and industrials attracted a notable USD 1.86 billion, USD 1.38 billion and USD 1.33 billion, respectively in inflows.
Global bond funds drew a net USD 14.27 billion for a fourth consecutive week of net purchases.
The high yields segment was particularly in demand as it attracted USD 2.72 billion, the largest amount in 10 weeks. Loan participation funds and government bond funds also racked up a significant USD 2.13 billion and USD 1.95 billion worth of inflows, respectively.
Meanwhile, money market funds saw USD 44.13 billion worth of inflows, contrasting a net USD 94.14 billion worth of weekly sales, the previous week.
Among commodities, investors pulled USD 540 million from precious metal funds, posting a third weekly outflow in four weeks. Energy funds also saw a net USD 456 million worth of sales for a seventh consecutive week of outflows.
Data covering 29,630 emerging market funds revealed that equity funds had their 11th successive weekly outflow to the tune of USD 1.95 billion. Bond funds, however, received inflows for a third straight week, worth about USD 517 million on a net basis.
(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy in Bengaluru; Editing by Toby Chopra)
This article originally appeared on reuters.com