Surveys
Global Investor Confidence Rose In May; Europe Makes A Comeback - Merrill Survey
Investor confidence has risen in the past
month despite market instability and a 2.5 per cent fall in
world
equities, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch's fund
manager survey for June.
A net 56 per cent of global investors
believe the world economy will strengthen over the coming year,
up from a
net 48 per cent in May. While equity allocations increased, a net
48
per cent of asset allocators are overweight equities, compared
with a
net 41 per cent in May. Meanwhile, investors are returning to
Europe as they retreat from emerging market and Japanese
equities, Bank of America said.
While allocations to the eurozone and US rose, investment in
global
emerging market equities fell to their lowest since December
2008, and a
net 9 per cent of asset allocators are now underweight emerging
market
equities – the first underweight reading since 2009 and down from
a net 3
per cent overweight reading last month.
The survey showed that
investors now identify a China hard landing as the greatest tail
risk –
more of a concern than eurozone sovereigns or banks. A net 31 per
cent
of regional fund managers say that China’s economy will weaken in
the
coming 12 months, compared with a net 8 per cent who held that
view in
May.
A net 25 per cent of the global panel say that emerging markets
is
the region they would most like to underweight in the coming 12
months -
the lowest ever reading, BofA said. Allocations to commodities
have also reached a
record low with a net 32 per cent of asset allocators holding
underweight positions.
“Investors can now see a certain level of stability returning
to
Europe’s economy and positioning for a recovery has started,”
said John
Bilton, European investment strategist.
An overall total of 248 panelists with $708 billion of assets
under
management participated in the survey from June 7-13. A total
of
190 managers, managing $572 billion, participated in the global
survey.
A total of 124 managers, managing $282 billion, participated in
the
regional surveys. The survey was conducted by BofA Merrill
Lynch
Research, with the help of market research company TNS.
Optimistic eurozone
The survey revealed that seeds of optimism in Europe evident in
last
month’s survey have flourished. A net 6 per cent of global
asset
allocators are overweight eurozone equities, representing a
14
percentage point swing from May when a net 8 per cent were
underweight.
Last month, a net 13 per cent selected the eurozone as the region
they
would most like to underweight in the coming year. However, that
reading has now
fallen to a net 1 per cent.
It is inside Europe that optimism has risen the most. A net 45
per
cent of European respondents to the regional survey expect
Europe’s
economy to strengthen in the coming year, up from a net 24 per
cent last
month. Expectations of European recession in the coming year
have
fallen sharply.
The greatest positive swings came in telecoms, financial
services,
banks and chemicals. A net 3 per cent of European investors are
now
overweight telecoms, compared with a net 24 per cent underweight
in May. A
similar net underweight position was wiped out in financial
services
over the month. A net 18 per cent of respondents are now
overweight
banks, after the market was net neutral a month ago.
Great rotation
June’s survey suggests that the great rotation from bonds to
equities
is evident. As overall equity allocations rose
month-on-month,
investors extended their underweight positions in bonds. A net 50
per
cent of asset allocators say they are underweight bonds in June,
up from
a net 38 per cent in May.
Furthermore, expectation of higher long-term yields has reached
the
highest level recorded by the survey since 2004, BofA said. The
proportion of the
global panel forecasting higher long-term rates in 12 months’
time jumped
to a net 81 per cent from a net 55 per cent last month. Only 4
per cent
of the panel see rates falling. At the same time, the
proportion
forecasting higher short-term rates also soared - up to a net 43
per cent
from a net 14 per cent in May.
Fear of "Abenomics" failure
Fear that Abenomics – Japan’s three-pronged stimulus plan – will
fail
has become investors’ second biggest tail risk after China,
interrupting the strong run in Japanese equities. The proportion
of asset
allocators overweight Japanese equities has fallen to a net 17
per cent
from May’s seven-year high of a net 31 per cent, according to
the
survey.
The proportion of investors viewing Japan as the region they
most
want to overweight has fallen to a net 16 per cent from a net 25
per
cent. A net 11 per cent of regional survey respondents said that
Japan’s
fiscal policy is “too restrictive.”