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US equity funds rebound with strongest inflows in four months

By Thomson Reuters Mar 27, 2026 | 5:27 AM

March 27 (Reuters) – U.S. equity funds drew strong inflows in the week to March 25 as hopes for de-escalation in the Middle East ​lifted sentiment after U.S. President Donald Trump ‌postponed an attack on Iranian energy infrastructure and proposed a deal to end the war.

Investors poured a net $37.24 billion into U.S. equity funds, the largest weekly inflow since mid-November ‌2024, ​snapping a three-week run of ⁠net selling, LSEG Lipper ⁠data showed.

However, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell more than 2% on Thursday as Iran continued to deny any talks with the U.S., deepening doubts ​over a swift resolution to the nearly one-month-long conflict.

Investors bought U.S. large-cap funds for the first ⁠time in seven weeks, adding ⁠a net $45.07 billion. Mid-cap and small-cap ​funds saw net outflows of $2.15 billion and $1.24 billion, respectively.

U.S. ​sectoral funds posted a net $2.9 billion in outflows, ‌the largest weekly withdrawal since December 24, with investors pulling a net $1.45 billion from tech, $974 million from gold and precious metals, and $507 million from healthcare.

U.S. ⁠bond funds attracted a net $7.56 billion, down nearly a third from the $12.05 billion added a week earlier.

Short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds ⁠drew a net $2.03 ‌billion, the smallest amount in three ⁠weeks, while general domestic taxable fixed ​income ‌funds saw net outflows of $1.11 billion.

Short-to-intermediate government ​and treasury ⁠funds received a net $9.07 billion, their biggest weekly purchase since at least May 2024.

Money market funds saw $57.96 billion in net withdrawals as investors ended a five-week run of net purchases.

(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra. Editing ​by Mark Potter)