The “risk-on” trade has officially hit a geopolitical wall.
As the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran escalates—disrupting Middle East energy facilities and critical shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz—global capital allocators are aggressively moving to the sidelines. The latest LSEG Lipper data reveals a massive, synchronized flight to safety, threatening to upend the broader disinflation and economic growth narratives for 2026.
💰 THE INFLOWS (THE FLIGHT TO CASH): Capital is aggressively seeking short-term safety and inflation protection.
- Money Market Surge: Global money market funds absorbed a staggering $47.9 billion in inflows (the highest since mid-February), with U.S. money market funds capturing the lion’s share at $30.75 billion.
- The Commodities Hedge: U.S. natural resources equity funds (energy and mining) caught strong bids as oil and gas prices spiked on supply disruption fears.
- Alternative & Fixed Income: U.S. short-term and municipal bond funds saw fresh demand, while alternative equity leveraged funds (including private equity, hedge funds, and leveraged ETFs) drew roughly $1 billion.
📉 THE OUTFLOWS (THE RISK-OFF ROTATION): Equities are bearing the absolute brunt of the geopolitical shock.
- The Equity Exodus: Global equity funds witnessed an outflow of $9.1 billion on Monday alone, marking the highest single-day exit in over two months.
- U.S. & Tech Hit Hard: Investors pulled a massive $9.6 billion from U.S.-focused equity funds. Notably, the previously untouchable U.S. technology sector—the darling of the AI boom—saw outflows exceeding $1 billion, matching the sheer volume of capital exiting global ex-U.S. equity funds.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: We are witnessing a textbook capital preservation rotation, but with a modern twist. The fact that $48 billion rotated into cash equivalents practically overnight shows how rapidly modern markets can de-risk. However, the simultaneous inflows into natural resources and alternative leveraged funds suggest that sophisticated investors aren’t just hiding under the mattress—they are actively hedging against a structural stagflation scenario where energy-driven inflation rebounds while global growth stalls. If the Strait of Hormuz remains contested, expect this equity bleed to accelerate.
👇 Asset Managers & Macro Strategists: Is this $48B flight to cash a temporary, headline-driven panic, or the beginning of a sustained structural rotation out of tech and back into commodities and fixed income?
