Weekly inflows into global equity funds hit 19-month highs on Iran deal optimism

June 19 (Reuters) – Investors poured the most capital in roughly 19 months into global equity funds in the week to June 17, buoyed by optimism over an ​interim deal to end the U.S.-Iran war and expectations that reopening ‌the Strait of Hormuz could help ease inflationary pressures.
They bought a net $55.22 billion of global equity funds during the week in their largest weekly purchase since November 13, ​2024, data from LSEG Lipper showed.
The U.S. and Iran signed an agreement ​on Wednesday that extends a ceasefire announced in April by another ⁠60 days to allow the two sides to negotiate a truce.
The ​deal also specifies the full resumption of maritime traffic “with no charge” in the Strait ​of Hormuz, a global oil supply route whose closure by Tehran had driven crude prices sharply higher during the conflict.
Optimism over the deal drove $38.37 billion into U.S. equity funds, ​the largest weekly inflow in 19 months. European and Asian funds also ​attracted weekly investments of $10.66 billion and $3.92 billion, respectively.
Technology sector funds garnered a record $21.46 billion ‌in ⁠weekly investments. Industrial sector funds also stood out, attracting $2.49 billion in inflows, the largest amount since March 4.
Global bond funds saw net weekly purchases of $17.17 billion, extending inflows for an 11th consecutive week.
Corporate bond funds led bond fund inflows, attracting $2.86 billion, the ​largest weekly net ​purchase in two ⁠months. Short-term and euro-denominated bond funds also had weekly inflows of $1.44 billion and $1.25 billion, respectively.
Investors added a net $40.03 billion ​to money market funds, reversing $19.02 billion in net sales ​the previous ⁠week.
Gold and other precious metal funds faced selling pressure for a fifth consecutive week, with investors withdrawing $1.78 billion from these funds.
In emerging markets, equity funds ⁠were ​out of favor for the eighth successive week, ​with $2.88 billion of outflows during the week. Bond funds also suffered $309 million in weekly net ​sales, data covering 28,869 funds showed.

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