U.S. equity funds captured substantial fresh capital in the week through April 22, drawing net purchases of $27.98 billion — the largest weekly inflow in four weeks. That figure represents the biggest weekly buying since roughly $36.94 billion of net acquisitions in the week through March 25.
Two principal themes underpinned the flows: stronger-than-expected corporate earnings and a high-profile corporate investment tied to artificial intelligence that boosted interest in technology-focused funds. LSEG data covering 134 S&P 500 companies indicated that first-quarter results for 82% of those firms exceeded mean analyst estimates, a backdrop that helped lift investor risk appetite.
Market participants also reacted to a major technology-sector development when Amazon on Monday announced it will invest up to $25 billion in Anthropic. That commitment was cited as a factor supporting demand for technology sector funds.
Sector and style flows
Sectoral funds drew $7.1 billion in total, marking a third straight week of inflows into sector-specific funds. The three largest sector gains were concentrated in technology, industrials and financials:
- Technology funds: $5.03 billion
- Industrials: $994 million
- Financials: $991 million
On a style basis, investors put $1.47 billion into U.S. value funds and $4.92 billion into growth funds, the latter amount representing the largest growth inflow in five weeks.
Fixed income and cash
Demand for bond funds re-emerged after a prior week of net selling. Following a week that saw $841 million of net sales, bond funds attracted approximately $3.4 billion of inflows in the latest week.
Within fixed income categories, net purchases included:
- General domestic taxable fixed income funds: $1.91 billion
- Short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds: $1.28 billion
- Municipal debt funds: $1.02 billion
Meanwhile, investors moved money out of money market funds on a net basis, withdrawing $16.1 billion after roughly $177.72 billion of net sales the prior week.
Outlook considerations
The recent patterns reflect a rotation back into risk assets supported by positive earnings surprises and a headline corporate investment tied to AI. Sector and style allocations showed a clear preference for technology- and growth-oriented exposures during the week, while the fixed income complex saw selective buying across taxable, investment-grade and municipal strategies.