More than $14 billion rolled out of the funds during the week
ended March 28, according to the research service, yet tech
sector funds pulled in $101 million as some investors appeared
to bet that the declines in Facebook Inc and some of its peers
were temporary.
Tom Roseen, head of research services at Thomson Reuters' Lipper
unit, said the so-called FANG stocks - Facebook, Amazon.com Inc,
Netflix Inc and Google parent Alphabet Inc - were "bloodied and
black-eyed" this week but the selling pressure made it a buying
opportunity.
U.S. President Donald Trump accused Amazon on Thursday of not
paying enough tax, taking advantage of the U.S. postal system
and putting small retailers out of business.
The company's stock sank more than 6 percent over the past week.
Amazon declined to comment on Trump's tweet on Thursday.
"These market darlings have had a strong ride for so long and
this mini-tech wreck or breather is kind of what we needed,"
said Roseen.
INTERNATIONAL STOCKS PUNISHED
During the latest week, U.S. investors also turned on
international stocks, which have been a popular place to sock
away gains from the domestic market. Non-domestic equity funds
recorded $340 million in withdrawals during their first week of
outflows this year.
European stock funds posted $1.2 billion in withdrawals, their
fourth straight week of outflows, according to Lipper. The euro
zone's momentum has been losing pace, according to Citigroup's
economic surprise index for the currency bloc, which is crouched
near a two-year low.
Japanese stock funds posted $638 million in withdrawals during
the week, the most since July, Lipper said.
Both Japanese and European markets, which carry currency risks
for U.S. investors, are down over the last month.
It was the second week of pressure for stock funds, which posted
$9.6 billion in withdrawals the week prior, according to Lipper.
Overall, the funds have attracted $55 billion this year.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and
Richard Chang)
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