The “AI Premium” is being questioned, and capital is moving to safety.
U.S. equity funds recorded net outflows of $1.42 billion for the week ending Feb 11, marking the first weekly net sales since January. The move comes as the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.03% on Thursday, driven by renewed anxiety over AI-related corporate spending and the potential disruption of software and service sectors.
🔄 THE ALLOCATION SHIFT: Under the hood, a massive rotation is underway:
- The Exit: Investors pulled a staggering $12.34 billion from Large-Cap funds and $787 million from Mid-Caps.
- The Entry: Bucking the trend, Small-Cap funds saw net inflows of $2.01 billion.
- The Safe Haven: U.S. Bond funds extended their winning streak to six weeks, attracting $13.37 billion in new capital.
🏛️ THE MACRO DRIVERS:
- Fed Uncertainty: A stronger-than-expected jobs report has dampened hopes for early rate cuts, forcing a repricing of risk assets.
- Inflation Watch: All eyes are now on Friday’s January inflation data to confirm the rate path.
- Cash Pile: Interestingly, investors withdrew $25.83 billion from Money Market funds, suggesting cash is being deployed—just not into Large-Cap Tech.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This is a textbook “De-Risking” trade. The divergence between Large-Cap outflows and Small-Cap/Bond inflows suggests that allocators are seeking value and yield over expensive growth. With the “AI Disruption” narrative turning into an “AI Cost” fear for software companies, the market is broadening out to areas that have lagged the rally.
👇 Portfolio Managers: Is the rotation into Small Caps a short-term hedge, or the start of a sustainable leadership change for 2026?
