Investment Strategies
Investors Reduce Cash Piles But Cautious Mood Prevails - BoA Merrill Lynch Poll
The monthly global survey of investment houses showed they remain cautious, with some doubts creeping in about economic growth prospects.
Investors around the world cut back on their cash reserves in
September, but holding still above long-term averages, while a
rising share of them took out protection against an equity market
reversal amid some sagging optimism about economic growth,
according to the monthly poll of fund managers by Bank
of America Merrill Lynch, issued yesterday.
The survey showed that the average share of all assets in cash
had dipped to 4.8 per cent in September from 4.9 per cent in
August, but still above the past 10-year average of 4.5 per cent,
implying a level of caution about riskier assets such as
stocks.
The survey was carried out from 1 to 7 September among panellists
with $629 billion of assets under management in total.
The net share of investors who are bullish on growth fell to a
balance of 25 per cent in September (taking those who are bullish
and subtracting the bears), from +62 per cent in January this
year. There is actually more hope for improved profits than
economic growth, a net 34 per cent seeing hopes for stronger
profits.
The biggest “shock” risk, the survey found, was that of military
action around North Korea; this risk helps also explain why the
survey has seen a fall in exposures to equities of neighbouring
Japan, the survey found. The North Korea risk is by some distance
the biggest worry; next down the line are worries of a policy
mistake by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central
Bank.
The survey shows that investors have the most pronounced
underweight stance on US equities since November 2007, and the
largest overweight/bullish stance on emerging market equities
since 2010.
A net 54 per cent of investors surveyed would be most surprised
to see a recession in the next six months; net 30 per cent would
find an equity bubble to be the least surprising event.