investors reduced their holdings in equity funds in the week leading up to Jan. 24, exercising caution before a pivotal inflation report due on Friday and a meeting of the U.S.
Federal Reserve next week, which could reshape expectations about the pace and extent of interest-rate cuts.
Despite this, a surge in global stocks limited fund outflows, spurred by optimism after strong quarterly results from Netflix and bullish forecasts from semiconductor companies, including Taiwan's TSMC and Super Micro Computer.
According to data from LSEG, global equity funds experienced $2.19 billion in net outflows during the week, marking the smallest weekly outflow in four weeks.
Investors sold U.S. and European funds of about $3.04 billion and $2.12 billion, respectively, on a net basis.
Conversely, Asian funds drew a net $2.35 billion in buying as inflows extended to a third successive week.
The tech sector gained $2.47 billion amid optimism over upbeat forecasts, the biggest inflow since Nov. 22, 2023.
The healthcare and energy sectors, meanwhile, saw $552 million and $593 million worth of net selling, respectively.
Debt funds attracted increased interest, with global bond funds registering $9.34 billion in inflows, marking the fifth consecutive week of positive inflows.
Short-term global bond funds received $5.29 billion, the largest inflow since Oct. 11, 2023.
High-yield funds saw net purchases of $880 million.
Concurrently, investors pulled a net $18.27 billion out of money market funds, staying net sellers for a second successive week.
In the commodities segment, precious metal funds attracted $209 million, their first weekly inflow in four weeks. Energy funds also saw about $54 million worth of net buying.
Data covering