The “soft landing” narrative is officially taking a backseat to geopolitical reality.
For the first time in two months, global investors have aggressively trimmed their equity fund holdings. As the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran intensifies, the threat of an energy-driven inflation shock is forcing a massive, highly targeted rotation out of risk assets and directly into safe havens.
📉 THE EQUITY EXODUS: The selloff was heavily concentrated in North America, while the rest of the world acted as a buffer.
- U.S. Takes the Hit: U.S. equity funds suffered a massive $21.92 billion outflow—the largest single-week exit since early January.
- The Global Net: Because European (+$8.8B), Asian (+$7.43B), and Emerging Market (+$5.3B) funds still saw inflows, the net global equity outflow was cushioned to just $1.44 billion.
- The Benchmark: The MSCI World Index is currently on track for its worst week since April 2025, down over 2.5%.
🛡️ THE FLIGHT TO SAFETY & YIELD: Capital isn’t disappearing; it is aggressively seeking short-term shelter and inflation hedges.
- Money Markets & Cash: Safe-haven demand drove a massive $20.22 billion into money market funds.
- Fixed Income Surge: Global bond funds absorbed $16.12 billion (their ninth consecutive week of inflows), with short-term bond inflows nearly tripling week-over-week to $3.62 billion.
- The Inflation Hedge: Sector-wise, Industrials (+$2.53B) and Energy (+$1.21B) absorbed fresh capital as investors actively hedged against a Middle East oil shock.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This is a textbook defensive rotation, but with a highly specific geographical bias. Investors are not blindly liquidating their entire global portfolios; they are surgically derisking their U.S. equity exposure while actively hiding in short-duration bonds and energy sectors to protect against a potential delay in central bank interest-rate cuts. When U.S. equities bleed $21 billion in a single week, the market is signaling that current valuations simply cannot absorb the rising geopolitical tail risks.
👇 Asset Managers & Macro Strategists: With U.S. equities seeing massive outflows while Europe and Asia still capture net inflows, are we witnessing the beginning of a sustained geographic rotation, or just a temporary U.S. de-risking?
