US Equity Fund Inflows Slow as Tech Selloff Pressures Demand
U.S. equity fund inflows eased in the week through February 4 as investors turned cautious amid a selloff in software stocks, according to LSEG Lipper data. Net purchases totaled $5.58 billion, down nearly 48% from the previous week’s $10.82 billion, even as strong earnings from Eli Lilly and Super Micro Computer helped offset some of the pressure.
Technology shares weakened after Anthropic introduced a legal plug-in for its generative AI chatbot, heightening concerns about disruption across the software sector. As a result, investors pulled $2.34 billion from technology funds. By contrast, industrials attracted $2.11 billion, while metals and mining funds drew $1.44 billion, reflecting a rotation toward more cyclical and defensive exposures.
Fund flows also diverged by market size. U.S. large-cap funds recorded $1.1 billion in inflows, while mid-cap and small-cap funds saw outflows of $1.59 billion and $1.67 billion, respectively. The pattern underscores investor caution toward riskier segments during periods of sector-specific volatility.
Bond funds continued to benefit from risk aversion, logging a fifth straight week of inflows totaling $11.11 billion. Short- to intermediate-term investment-grade funds led with $6.34 billion—the largest weekly intake since at least 2022—while municipal and inflation-protected funds also saw solid demand. Money market funds attracted a hefty $83.09 billion, their biggest weekly inflow since early December, highlighting a broader preference for liquidity amid market uncertainty.











