April 4 (Reuters) - U.S. equity funds saw outflows in
the week ending April 2 as investors shed risky assets on
growing concerns that President Donald Trump's sweeping trade
tariffs could drive up costs, pressure corporate profits and
heighten recession risks.
U.S. investors divested a net $10.85 billion worth of equity
funds during the week although less than a half compared with
$22.89 billion worth of net accumulations in the prior week.
Major Wall Street indexes dropped over 4% on Thursday as
Trump introduced sweeping reciprocal tariffs on trading
partners, escalating a trade war and intensifying fears of an
economic slowdown.
U.S. small-cap funds saw significant outflows of $4.18
billion, reversing $3.07 billion in inflows from the prior week.
Large-cap and mid-cap funds also faced net sales of $2.9 billion
and $461 million, respectively.
Sectoral funds recorded their fifth consecutive week of
outflows, totaling $2.45 billion. Investors pulled $1.69 billion
from tech funds, $1.18 billion from consumer discretionary
funds, and $860 million from healthcare funds.
Meanwhile, safe-haven demand drove inflows into money market
funds, which attracted a net $22.01 billion, marking a second
straight week of gains. U.S. bond funds experienced $1.73
billion in net sales, extending their streak of net outflows to
a third consecutive week.
Investors divested $1.03 billion from U.S. general domestic
taxable fixed-income funds and $864 million from
short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds, while allocating a
net $1.53 billion to short-to-intermediate government and
treasury funds.