Global equity funds draw largest weekly inflow in five weeks

Dec ⁠12 (Reuters) – Global equity funds attracted significant inflows in the ⁠week to December 10 as investors positioned for a potential Federal Reserve rate cut, despite ⁠lingering concerns over stretched tech valuations and heavy AI-related spending.

Investors acquired global equity funds of a net $12.9 ​billion, the highest for a week since $22.72 billion net additions in ‍the week through November 5.

The U.S. central bank on Wednesday cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point but signalled it will likely pause further reductions for now, saying inflation “remains somewhat elevated” and ​the outlook is still uncertain.

European funds led regional equity fund inflows as these funds drew $6.4 billion, adding to the prior week’s $6.47 billion net purchase.

The U.S. and Asian funds, meanwhile, saw $3.3 billion and $1.3 ​billion weekly inflows, respectively.

Investors added sectoral funds of a net $2.13 billion, the most for ⁠a week since November 12.

They snapped up metals and mining, utility and industrial ‌sector funds of roughly $889 million, $824 million and $405 million, respectively, on a net basis.

In parallel, money market ⁠funds faced $12.99 billion worth of outflows following the ​prior week’s $110.4 billion net inflows.

Global bond funds stayed popular for a 34th week, ‌with a net $8.23 billion in weekly inflows.

Short-term bond funds witnessed approximately $2 billion worth of inflows for a sixth successive ‍week of net purchase. Euro denominated bond funds also attracted a significant $1.9 billion.

Gold and precious metals commodity funds were in demand for a fifth successive week, with weekly inflows totaling a net 1.9 billion in the week.

Emerging markets data for 28,720 funds showed that investors pumped $2.78 billion into equity funds, extending their most recent buying streak into a seventh straight week. Bond funds saw a moderate $68 million weekly net inflow.

(Reporting ⁠by Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy ‌in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal ⁠Muhammed)