The FINANCIAL — Global investors have moved out of equities into cash ahead of an expected U.S. Fed rate hike, according to June’s BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey (FMS). Investors have also shown concern about a Greek default and a possible bubble in Chinese equities as they have scaled back risk.
Cash levels rise to 4.9 percent of portfolios, up from 4.5 percent in May; the proportion of investors overweight equities falls to net 38 percent from 47 percent.
Expectations of higher rates are the highest since May 2011, with a net 80 percent of the panel forecasting a rise in short-term rates.
The majority of the FMS panel sees a negative resolution of Greece talks: 15 percent predict Grexit, and 42 percent predict default without exit.
China worries: seven out of 10 investors say China’s equity market is in a “bubble.” A net 50 percent see China’s economy weakening.
The proportion of investors expecting to underweight global emerging markets surges to a net 21 percent from net 6 percent in May.
Corporate operating margins will fall in the coming 12 months, say a net 17 percent of investors – up from net 5 percent in May.
The U.S. dollar is the most crowded trade as Fed tightening looms; 72 percent predict the euro will weaken vs. the dollar in coming year.
“Higher cash levels show how caution is in the air, with 65 trading days until we expect the Fed to tighten,” said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research.
“Investors remain bullish on European equities but are increasingly concerned about Greece and higher yields,” said James Barty, head of European equity strategy.
Discussion about this post