Feb 10 (Reuters) - Foreign investors were net sellers of Japanese stocks for a fourth straight week, amid lingering concerns over an accelerated pace of U.S. monetary policy tightening, although a recovery in domestic shares capped outflows.

Outsiders sold Japanese stocks of 214.08 billion yen ($1.85 billion) in the week to Feb. 4, which was the lowest net selling in four weeks, data from Japanese exchanges showed.

Foreigners sold a net 170.56 billion yen in cash equity markets and a net 43.52 billion yen worth of derivatives.

Meanwhile, cross-border investors purchased Japanese bonds of 1.05 trillion yen after two straight weeks of net selling, finance ministry data showed.

Japanese shares rebounded from their multi-month lows with the Nikkei share average snapping a four-week losing streak last week, thanks to a Wall Street recovery and upbeat quarterly earnings results from domestic firms including Keyence , Alps Alpine, and games maker Konami Holdings .

The Nikkei share average and the Topix index, both gained over 2.5% last week and posted their biggest weekly gain since mid-October.

Last week, Japanese investors purchased cross-border equities worth 264.5 billion yen, which marked a second straight week of net buying. They also bought overseas bonds of 42.7 billion yen, after two straight weeks of net selling. ($1 = 115.6500 yen)

(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)