US Equity Funds See Biggest Outflows In Eight Weeks On Geopolitical Worries

(Reuters) - U.S. equity funds witnessed the sharpest weekly net sales in eight weeks in ‌the seven days to March 4 as investors ‌cut risk exposure amid concerns over the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran ​and its potential impact on inflation and the interest-rate outlook.

Investors divested a net $21.92 billion of U.S. equity funds during the week in their largest weekly net sales since ‌January 7, data ⁠from LSEG Lipper showed.

As the conflict in the Middle East entered its seventh day on ⁠Friday, oil prices were on track for the biggest weekly gains since early 2022, fanning worries of inflation, ​potentially delaying ​rate cuts by the ​U.S. Federal Reserve.

U.S. growth ‌funds suffered $11.15 billion worth of outflows, the biggest for a week since December 17, 2025. Investors still bought $146 million worth of value funds, logging a fourth weekly net purchase.

Sectoral funds, meanwhile, saw weekly inflows of $1.2 billion as ‌investors snapped up industrials, utilities, ​and metals and mining sector ​funds of $1.65 billion, $671 million ​and $582 million, respectively.

Safe-haven demand widened weekly money ‌market fund inflows to $22.51 billion, ​an eight-week ​high.

U.S. bond funds attracted a ninth weekly net purchase, amounting to $7.29 billion.

Short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds, municipal debt funds, ​and short-to-intermediate government ‌and treasury funds saw significant net purchases of $1.71 ​billion, $1.44 billion and $929 million, respectively.

By Gaurav ​Dogra
Editing by Vijay Kishore

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