U.S. equity vehicles logged meaningful net inflows totaling $7.05 billion in the seven days ending April 1, according to data compiled by LSEG Lipper. The move followed a prior week marked by heavy buying of equities, when investors added about $36.95 billion. The most recent flows coincided with a temporary softening in investor concern over the Middle East after President Donald Trump signaled the United States was approaching the fulfillment of its objectives related to the conflict.
Demand in the equity complex was concentrated in large-cap funds. U.S. large-cap equity funds saw net purchases of $14.67 billion in the reporting week, representing a second consecutive week of inflows into that segment. Conversely, investors pulled money from smaller-cap and targeted equity strategies: small-cap funds suffered net outflows of $1.34 billion, mid-cap funds saw net withdrawals of $1.09 billion, and sector-specific equity funds faced net redemptions of $3.82 billion.
Fixed income funds experienced a reversal after a long run of inflows. Bond funds recorded net sales of $10.17 billion for the week - the first weekly net outflow since December 31, 2025. Within taxable fixed income, short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds registered their first weekly net disposal in 18 weeks, amounting to $5.92 billion, while general domestic taxable fixed income funds were reduced by a net $1.25 billion.
Money market instruments continued to attract cash, drawing $5.88 billion during the week, marking the sixth inflow in seven weeks for that category.
Investor behavior showed sensitivity to rapid shifts in geopolitical rhetoric. While earlier comments from President Trump suggested the United States was close to meeting its war objectives - which corresponded with the temporary easing in risk aversion - markets turned cautious again on Monday after new threats from the president. Over the weekend, Trump escalated rhetoric by threatening to destroy civilian infrastructure in Iran, including power plants and bridges, unless the strategic Strait of Hormuz was reopened by Tuesday. That escalation contributed to renewed risk-off positioning among some investors.
The week’s flows underline a bifurcated market response: preference for large-cap equity exposure while allocations to smaller-cap and sector-specific strategies were trimmed, and a rotation out of certain bond sleeves into short-term cash alternatives.