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Global equity fund investors halt eight-week buying streak as bond yields rise

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 7:05 AM

May 22 (Reuters) – Global equity funds recorded the first weekly outflow in nine weeks in the week through May 20, as investors turned cautious over inflation ​and a rise in long-term borrowing costs to nearly ‌two-decade highs.

According to LSEG Lipper data, investors liquidated a net $6.13 billion of global equity funds during the week, logging their first weekly net sales since mid-March, when they had withdrawn a net $21.87 billion.

The 30-year ‌U.S. ​Treasury yield climbed to 5.201% on Wednesday, ⁠its highest since 2007, ⁠as uncertainty around a possible resolution to the Middle East conflict raised concerns over energy prices and inflation. It last traded at 5.0795%.

U.S. equity funds suffered the second ​weekly outflow in three weeks, to the tune of $12.05 billion. Asian funds also recorded net outflows of $570 million, though ⁠European funds attracted a net $4.62 billion ⁠in inflows.

Technology sector funds were popular for a ​seventh successive week, with net inflows of $6.94 billion. Financials and ​industrials, however, had weekly outflows of $2.8 billion and $1.3 billion, ‌respectively.

Investors, meanwhile, bought a net $21.89 billion of global bond funds as they extended the recent buying streak into a seventh successive week.

Short-term bond funds, government bond funds and euro-denominated bond ⁠funds witnessed significant weekly net purchases of $7.47 billion, $3.09 billion and $1.68 billion, respectively.

Money market funds recorded a lighter $1.06 billion weekly net inflow, after ⁠a net outflow ‌of $10.41 billion the prior week.

Gold and precious ⁠metals commodity funds saw a net $2.34 billion ​of weekly ‌inflows, remaining popular for a second straight ​week.

In emerging ⁠markets, investors shed a net $2.95 billion of equity funds, resulting in a fourth straight week of outflows. They also withdrew $256 million from bond funds after a run of six weekly purchases, combined data for 28,926 funds showed.

(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra; Editing ​by Jonathan Ananda)