U.S. investors pull funds from U.S. equities at the fastest pace in eight weeks amid geopolitical fears.
U.S. equity funds witnessed the sharpest weekly net sales in eight weeks in the seven days to March 4 as investors cut risk exposure amid concerns over the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran and its potential impact on inflation and the interest-rate outlook.
Investors divested a net $21.92 billion of U.S. equity funds during the week in their largest weekly net sales since January 7, data from LSEG Lipper showed.
U.S. growth funds suffered $11.15 billion worth of outflows, the biggest for a week since December 17, 2025. Investors still bought $146 million worth of value funds, logging a fourth weekly net purchase.
U.S. bond funds attracted a ninth weekly net purchase, amounting to $7.29 billion.
Short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds, municipal debt funds, and short-to-intermediate government and treasury funds saw significant net purchases of $1.71 billion, $1.44 billion, and $929 million, respectively.