Surveys
Rising Inflation, Ukraine Crisis Hit Global Investor Sentiment

Geopolitics, surging energy and other prices spooked investors in all major developed regions during February.
Surging energy prices and worries about intense fighting in
Ukraine hit global investor sentiment in February, with Europe
leading the decline, a monthly snapshot of investors’ actual
buying and selling behavior shows.
The State Street Investor Confidence Index® (ICI) for March 2022
fell to 99.7, down 4.2 points from February’s revised reading of
103.9. The decrease was led by a 10.9 drop in the European ICI to
82.9 as well as an 8.2 drop in the Asian ICI to 88.7. The North
American ICI also dropped 3.3 points to 103.1.
The index assigns a precise meaning to changes in investor risk
appetite: the greater the percentage allocation to equities, the
higher risk appetite or confidence. A reading of 100 is neutral;
it is the level at which investors are neither increasing nor
decreasing their long-term allocations to risky assets. The index
differs from survey-based measures in that it is based on the
actual trades, as opposed to opinions, of institutional
investors.
“Investor sentiment remained volatile, with a decline in March
reversing some of the prior month’s gains, pushing global
sentiment toward 12-month medians," Marvin Loh, senior macro
strategist at State Street Global Markets, said. “Intensified
fighting in Ukraine, rising commodity inflation and continued
hawkish rhetoric from central bankers all combined to curb
investor enthusiasm. As anticipated, Europe saw the largest drop,
weighed down by its proximity to the conflict along with
uncertainty over energy deliveries from Russia.”
“In contrast, the decline in North America was somewhat moderate
in comparison, while Asia readings were complicated by the recent
surge in Covid cases. Idiosyncratic factors are likely to
continue affecting regional performance until greater clarity on
the conflict and its impact on inflation are better understood,”
Loh added.