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U.S. Equity Fund Inflows at 3 Week High on Chipmaker Demand

May 15 (Reuters) - U.S. equity fund inflows surged to a three-week high in the week to May 13 on optimism ​over a strong earnings season and robust revenue guidelines ‌by chipmakers, despite a buildup in inflationary pressure.

According to LSEG Lipper data, investors pumped up a net $22.37 billion into U.S. equity funds ​in their largest weekly net purchase since $27.97 billion of ​inflows in the week to April 22.

Strong sales ⁠forecasts by chipmakers Advanced Micro Devices and Microchip Technology last week ​bolstered investor sentiments and pushed the S&P 500 to a ​record high of 7,517.12 on Thursday.

LSEG data covering 455 S&P 500 constituents showed about 83% of companies beat analysts' average profit estimates ​for the first quarter.

Inflows to U.S. large-cap funds of $17.06 ​billion were the largest in six weeks. Mid-cap and small-cap funds, however, ‌had ⁠net outflows of $1.25 billion and $2.53 billion, respectively.

The technology sector gained record weekly net investments of $8.51 billion, while financials faced an outflow of $1.37 billion.

Bond fund inflows surged to a three-month ​high of $12.9 ​billion in the ⁠week.

U.S. short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds, general domestic taxable fixed income funds and, short-to-intermediate government and ​treasury funds segments drew significant net investments ​of $4.02 billion, $3.08 ⁠billion and $2.14 billion, respectively.

At the same time, investors divested a net $4.4 billion of money market funds after their $113.53 billion net ⁠purchase ​a week ago.

Reporting by Gaurav Dogra, Editing by Nick Zieminski

Source: Reuters


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