Financial Results
Global Investor Confidence Breaks Above 100 Points For First Time In 10 Months - State Street

The State Street Investor Confidence Global Index has risen into optimistic territory for the first time since June 2016.
Despite this being a time of major uncertainty in the world, with
the effects of Britain’s impending departure from the European
Union and Donald Trump's reign as President of the US, consumer
confidence is on the rise, according to the State Street Investor
Confidence Index.
Global investor confidence for May 2017 rose by 5.1 points to
102.5 from April’s reading of 97.4. This is the first time the
Investor Confidence Global Index has stood above 100 points since
June 2016. A reading above 100 suggests optimism, and under that,
pessimism.
The index, which is developed by Kenneth Froot and Paul
O’Connell, measures investor confidence or risk appetite
quantitatively by analysing the actual buying and selling
patterns of institutional investors.
The North American ICI logged the biggest surge in confidence
from 95.1 in April 2017 to 104.1 in May. The European ICI only
marginally increased by 0.4 points to 96.9 from 96.2.
However, there was a shrink in investor confidence reported in
the Asian ICI, which has decreased for the second consecutive
month, as the index logged a fall from 104.6 to 101.1.
“After 10 consecutive months of readings below 100, Global
investor confidence is finally picking up steam,” said Rajeev
Bhargava, managing director and head of investor behavior
research, State Street Associates. “Markets continue to
anticipate a very gradual course for the Federal Reserve rate
hikes and with hopes for increased infrastructure spending and
tax reforms, the North American ICI readings are resonating with
the uptick in risk appetite.”
“Looking regionally, ICI numbers in Europe are below the neutral
100-level mark, as investors take a pause to reflect on elevated
valuations in the region following the strong run year-to-date,”
commented Froot. “In contrast, Asian ICI has remained in a
risk-on environment, perhaps reflecting the superior earnings
growth in the region, as well as the falling risk premium in
China.”