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Investors Turn to Cash Amid Geopolitical Tensions, Interest Rate Rise Fears - BoA Merrill Lynch

Investors are scaling back risk and turning to cash as result of rising geo-political tensions and the threat of rising interest rates, according to the latest BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey for August.
Investors are scaling back risk and turning to cash as result of
rising geopolitical tensions and the threat of rising interest
rates, according to the latest Bank of America
Merrill Lynch fund manager survey for August.
The survey found that a net 27 per cent of respondents were
overweight cash in August, up from a net 12 per cent in July,
accounting for an average of 5.1 percent of global portfolios, an
increase of 4.5 per cent a month ago, as concerns over
geopolitical risk increased. The survey questioned a total of 224
panellists with $675 billion of assets under management between
them.
A total of 45 per cent of respondents said geopolitical risk was
their number one “tail risk” this month, up from 28 per cent a
month ago.
The survey also highlighted how a rate hike is also playing on
investors’ minds, with 65 per cent of the panel expecting a US
rate rise before the end of the first half of 2015.
“The market melt-up is over, or at least on pause, as investors
seek refuge while they digest world events and the prospect of
higher rates,” said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist
at BoA Merrill Lynch Research.
Global growth predictions have fallen since from a net 69 per
cent in July to 56 per cent, while sentiment towards Europe has
fallen significantly, with the earnings outlook for the region
suffering its greatest monthly fall since the survey started.
In eurozone equities, 13 per cent of asset allocators are
overweight, a fall of 22 percentage points in one month, while US
equities also lost ground with a 4- percentage point drop to a 6
per cent.
Furthermore, 30 per cent of global investors believe that the
12-month profit outlook is worse is Europe than in any other
region.
Emerging markets
Asset allocators are now 30 per cent overweight Japanese
equities, a rise from a net 26 per cent in July, making Japanese
equities the most popular of the five regions. Global emerging
markets showed the greatest momentum as a result of stronger
belief in China and in commodities, with the proportion of asset
allocators overweight the region rising to 17 per cent from 5 per
cent in July.
In the coming 12 months, 6 per cent of regional fund managers
expect the Chinese economy to improve, compared to 42 per cent
that forecast China’s economy to weaken two months ago.
Fewer global asset allocators are underweight commodities - 5 per
cent compared with 15 per cent in July, while 21 per cent of
investors say that GEM is the region they most want to overweight
in the next 12 months.
The proportion of respondents favouring value over growth
investing reached a record level of 48 per cent, while 59 per
cent believe that large caps will outperform small caps, the
highest reading in two years.