They offloaded a net $29.7 billion worth of global equity funds during the week, the most for a week since December 18, data from LSEG Lipper showed.
US equity funds faced the largest weekly selloff in three months to the tune of $33.53 billion.
Also, investors divested a net $1.11 billion worth of European funds but it was still less than the $5.35 billion net sales in the previous week, which underscored some optimism as the German parliament approved a debt reform package to boost Europe's biggest economy.
On the other hand, investors accumulated about $3.5 billion worth of Asian funds for a 14th straight week of net buying.
Outflows from sectoral equity funds, however, cooled to a three-week low of $178.7 million as industrials, and gold and precious metals funds drew $1.02 billion and $485 million, respectively, in inflows, despite the net selling in a majority of sectors.
Demand for debt funds, meanwhile, eased to a 11-week low during the week, with investors allocating just $357.92 million to global bond funds.
Global government bond funds, loan participation funds and corporate bond funds witnessed a net $2.03 billion, $1.56 billion and $1.34 billion worth of net sales. Short-term bond funds, however, bucked the trend with a net $4.47 billion in weekly inflows. Money market funds saw a pull out worth about $14.1 billion during the week, a second successive week of withdrawal.
Investors, meanwhile, racked up a net $2.71 billion worth of gold and precious metal funds, extending net purchases into a sixth consecutive week. Energy funds saw a marginal $25.9 million worth of net sales.
According to data encompassing 29,618 emerging market funds, investors exited $930 million worth of bond funds, snapping a 10-weeks long buying string. They also ditched equity funds of a net $571 million.
Global equity funds see selloff on tariff woes
FE Team | Published: March 21, 2025 22:54:24
Global equity funds see selloff on tariff woes
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