© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A street sign for Wall Street hangs in front of the New York Stock Exchange May 8, 2013. REUTERS/Lucas Jackso/File Photo
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(Reuters) – U.S. equity funds attracted net inflows in the week through Dec. 13 amid a rally on Wall Street despite caution ahead of the Federal Reserve’s upcoming monetary policy announcement.
Investors accumulated a net $1.98 billion worth of U.S. equity funds during the week, resuming inflows after two successive weeks of net selling.
The S&P 500 experienced a breakout last Friday, reaching a 20-month closing high of 4604.37 following a robust U.S. jobs report that bolstered optimism for the economy’s soft landing.
The index further climbed to a 23-month high of 4738.57 this week as the Fed kept interest rates unchanged and signalled a potential end to its stringent monetary policy.
During the week, U.S. equity value funds attracted about $2 billion, marking a third straight week of net buying. Meanwhile, growth funds experienced $376 million in net selling, the smallest outflow in four weeks.
Tech and consumer discretionary sector funds were particularly sought after, with net inflows of $1.88 billion and $971 million, respectively. Conversely, health care and metals & mining sectors faced net outflows of $681 million and $645 million respectively.
Meanwhile, investors sold a net $4.41 billion worth of U.S. bond funds, extending net selling into a third successive week.
Investors withdrew $3.68 billion out of U.S. taxable bond funds and $524 million out of municipal bond funds.
High yield funds still remained in demand for a sixth consecutive week, drawing a net $763 million worth of inflows. Investors also poured $1.15 billion into general domestic taxable fixed income funds.
U.S. money market funds, on the other hand, recorded their first weekly outflow in eight weeks, totalling $16.68 billion in net selling.
Source: Investing.com