Investors Yank $6.6B from U.S. Stock Funds

Investors continue to leave U.S. stock mutual funds in droves, according to the latest statistics from the Investment Company Institute. For the week ended May 2, investors pulled an estimated $6.60 billion from mutual funds that invest long-term in U.S. stocks, almost six times the $1.17 billion they withdrew from the funds a week earlier. Since the beginning of the year, U.S. funds have posted outflows totaling more than $37 billion.

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Investors were more receptive to non-U.S. funds, steering an estimated $1.30 billion their way for the week. They were even kinder to bond funds, which received an estimated infusion of $7.51 billion, up 36% from the $5.52 billion inflow a week earlier. Of the $7.51 billion, $6.43 went to taxable bond funds with the remaining $1.07 billion going to muni bond funds.

Hybrid funds — those that invest in both stocks and fixed income securities — received a tepid $36 million in estimated inflows, down from $945 million the previous week.

All told, mutual funds took in an estimated $2.24 billion, the weakest inflow so far this year.

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The weekly fund flow estimates are derived from data covering more than 95% of industry assets, according to ICI. The statistics cover long-term mutual funds, those the ICI defines as investing in long-term instruments.


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