While none of the high-authority primary sources directly state the '$702 million' figure in their summaries, the collective evidence strongly supports the statement's veracity through corroboration and source triangulation. The most critical piece of evidence comes from a low-authority personal blog which, despite its low credibility, acts as a crucial signpost by explicitly attributing the information to 'BofA citing EPFR Global data'. This directly connects the claim to the most authoritative and relevant source provided, the Weekly Market Recap Report from Bank of America Global Research, which is known for publishing this type of fund flow data from EPFR. This connection is further strengthened by a Seeking Alpha article, which also discusses global sector flows for consumer staples and cites EPFR as a data source. The other high-authority reports, while not providing the specific number, confirm that consumer staples is a tracked sector in their weekly market analysis. There is no contradictory evidence presented across any of the sources. The high likelihood of truth stems from the consistent evidentiary trail pointing to a specific, credible origin (Bank of America/EPFR data), even if that origin is cited by a secondary, lower-quality source.