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6 Charts on Near-Record US Fund Flows in February
Long-term US funds had another superb month in February, bringing in over $150 billion, second only to March 2021 in the past 15 years. The past three months of inflows have been the largest since March 2021, with taxable-bond funds continuing to lead the charge. In February, they were responsible for more than half the month’s inflows. International-equity funds also had a strong month, with their largest monthly intake since 2018.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Data as of Feb. 28, 2026. Download CSV.
Bond Funds’ Streak Continues With Another Massive Month
Taxable-bond funds built off last month’s record inflows with another strong month, gathering nearly $85 billion in new assets in February. The past two months of inflows were the two largest figures for taxable-bond funds over the past five years, hinting at investors’ conservatism amid artificial intelligence fears, geopolitical tension, and high equity valuations. Overall, 24 of 27 taxable-bond Morningstar Categories saw inflows. Investors also continued to diversify geographically, with global-bond USD-hedged funds bringing in over $10 billion, their largest monthly inflows in over a decade.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Data as of Feb. 28, 2026. Download CSV.
Investors Eye Corporate Bonds as Spreads Widen
Corporate bond funds, which primarily comprise investment-grade corporate debt, collected $8 billion in February, their largest monthly figure since June 2020; wider spreads may be why. High corporate issuance in February contributed to a higher supply relative to demand and, thus, wider corporate bond spreads. AI fears and geopolitical tensions may have also played a role. After a few years of spread tightening, investors may have jumped at the opportunity as corporate fundamentals generally remained strong and large-cap margins were near all-time highs.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Ice Data Indices, LLC via FRED®. Data as of Feb 28, 2026. Download CSV.
Large-Value US Equity Funds Post Rare Inflows in February
Amid wider US equity outflows in February of $4.6 billion, large-value funds posted a $7.5 billion inflow, just their eighth (and largest) monthly net increase in the past three years. The category still played second fiddle to its larger sibling, large-blend, which gathered a humdrum (for it) $10.6 billion. Meanwhile, investors fled growth funds to the tune of nearly $22 billion, led by a large-growth exodus of more than $18 billion. A short-term performance disparity, with value stocks outpacing growth stocks by about 12 percentage points in the first two months of 2026, may have sparked interest.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Data as of Feb. 28, 2026. Download CSV.
Investors in Love With International Equity in February
International-equity funds’ monthly inflow streak extended to 10 in February, with the group’s largest inflow in three years at $33 billion. It edged January’s $31 billion gathering for the title. These gains followed a string of strong performances, with the Morningstar Global Markets Ex-US Index’s trailing one-year return topping 40% in February. Diversified emerging markets led categories, with a $9.5 billion intake.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Data as of Feb. 28, 2026. Download CSV.
Industrials Continue to Lead Sector-Equity Fund Flows
Industrials funds attracted more than $5 billion in February, again taking the flows crown among sector-equity funds. They’ve attracted nearly $24 billion over the past year, with a combined $10 billion going into two aerospace and defense funds. The broader sector-equity group enjoyed inflows of nearly $10 billion in February, helped by strong flows to equity energy, natural resources, technology, and infrastructure. Meanwhile, financial funds saw more than $5 billion deducted, their largest outflows since May 2022.
Source: Morningstar Direct. Data as of 02/28/2026. Download CSV.
_This article is adapted from the Morningstar Direct US Asset Flows Commentary for February 2026. Download the full report here. _