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(Reuters) - Inflows into U.S. equity funds fell sharply in the week through Jan. 1 hit by rising Treasury yields and year-end profit- taking, along with concerns about a slower pace of Federal Reserve rate reductions this year.

Data from LSEG Lipper indicated that U.S. equity funds received just $490 million worth of investments during the week, significantly smaller than the $20.46 billion in net purchases in the week before.

Last week, concerns over the outlook for mega-cap technology stocks increased as the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.641%, its highest since May 2.

Despite impressive annual gains in 2024, with the Nasdaq Composite , S&P 500 , and Dow Jones Industrial Average rising 28.64%, 23.31%, and 12.88% respectively, all three indexes fell by over 1% this week as investors across sectors, took profits.

Investors bought U.S. large-cap and multi-cap funds of $5.43 billion and $844 million, respectively, but in contrast, pulled $1.67 billion and $485 million, respectively out of small-cap and mid-cap funds.

Sectoral funds witnessed a fifth successive week of outflow, valued at a net 2.55 billion. Industrials, tech and healthcare sectors, with $519 million, $385 million and $358 million in net selling, led outflows.

Concurrently, investors added a robust $54.59 billion worth of safer money market funds, the largest weekly net purchase in four weeks.

US equity inflows cool on higher bond yields

U.S. bond funds were under selling pressure for a third consecutive week, with investors divesting a net $493 million worth of these funds.

U.S. short-to-intermediate government & treasury funds segment, however, bucked the trend as it gained a net $1.35 billion worth of inflows, the highest in three months.