April 24 (Reuters) - Weekly inflows into global equity funds surged to a more than 17-month high in the week through April 22, fuelled by ​optimism over demand for artificial intelligence and robust first-quarter earnings ‌from some major U.S. banks.

According to LSEG Lipper data, global equity funds attracted net weekly investments of $48.72 billion, the largest sum for a week since November 13, 2024.

Shares ​of TSMC (2330.TW), opens new tab, the world's biggest contract manufacturer of advanced AI chips, ​and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chip supplier SK Hynix (000660.KS), opens new tab hit record highs this ⁠week, bolstered by upbeat earnings.

U.S. equity funds drew $27.98 billion, the most ​in four weeks, while European and Asian funds saw net inflows of $18.41 ​billion and $157 million, respectively.

Sector funds attracted a net $8.22 billion, marking their largest weekly inflows in three months, led by technology, industrials, and metals and mining, which drew $6.21 billion, $1.82 ​billion, and $1.02 billion, respectively.

Investors pumped a net $3.13 billion into hard currency ‌bond ⁠funds in their largest weekly net purchase since March 18. Meanwhile, outflows from short-term bond funds eased to $2.21 billion from $7.08 billion the week before.

Money market funds saw a second successive weekly outflow to the tune ​of $20.26 billion after ​the prior week's $173.09 ⁠billion weekly net sales.

Investors extended their recent streak of net purchases in gold and other precious metals funds ​into a fourth successive week, investing a net $841 ​million in ⁠these funds.

Emerging market funds were in demand for a third straight week as investors added $4.34 billion into equity funds and $3.64 billion into bond funds, ⁠data for ​a combined 28,853 funds showed.

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