Arab Times

Global funds raise equities to near two-year highs: poll

Eurozone stocks at 20.6 pct

-

LONDON, Sept 30, (RTRS): World stocks are set for the longest quarterly run of gains since 1997, and investors’ enthusiasm for shares appears undimmed, with a Reuters poll showing average equity exposure in portfolios at the highest in almost two years.

The monthly asset allocation survey of 50 fund managers and chief investment officers in Europe, the United States, Britain and Japan was conducted between Sept 1527, a month when MSCI’s all-country world index hit fresh record highs. The Bank of England and the US Federal Reserve also suggested rate rises were on the cards.

The index has enjoyed 11 straight months of gains — its longest winning streak since 2003-4. It is up 15 percent year-to-date, despite the rate rise talk and tensions between the United States and nuclear-armed North Korea.

The poll showed investors raising their overall equity allocation to 47.9 percent, a near two-year high, while cutting bond holdings to 39.8 percent, the lowest level since April.

Since the start of the year, investors have added 2.1 percentage points to their overall equity exposure, preferring to focus on the recovering world economy.

“Despite some signs of weakness in the global economy in recent weeks, it still appears to be growing above market expectatio­ns,” said Peter Lowman, chief investment officer at UK-based wealth manager Investment Quorum.

“Excluding any unforeseen geopolitic­al confrontat­ions, this should be a good environmen­t for global equities, given that we appear to be in a Goldilocks economy.”

A number of investors did express concern about complacenc­y, especially as the Fed and the European Central Bank are seeking to wind down their asset buying programmes. Nadege Dufosse, head of asset allocation at Candriam, said this tightening bias would test the resilience of equity markets. “In particular, the resilience of European equity markets in the context of a stronger euro will be tested,” she said.

Investors remained bullish on European stocks, having raised their eurozone equity holdings by almost 4 percentage points since the start of the year.

The exposure now stands at 20.6 percent of their global equity portfolios, the highest in at least five years.

European stocks are up almost 7 percent year-to-date and look set to end the quarter up around 1.8 percent.

Some 77 percent of poll participan­ts who answered a question on the euro said it was not overvalued at current levels, although the currency has firmed around 1 percent over the month against the dollar.

Jean Medecin, a member of the investment committee at Carmignac, said receding political risks in Europe had unleashed a surge of optimism and spurred investment.

“Euro strength since the beginning of 2017 is a reflection of the growth shock witnessed by the eurozone,” he said.

Some managers suggested the euro had further to go.

“The eurozone has been treated as a basket case by the financial markets for a number of years, leaving the euro unloved and under-owned, but the economy is consistent­ly surprising on the upside,” said Rob Pemberton, investment director at HFM Columbus.

Poll participan­ts who answered a question on the Bank of England were evenly split on whether it would raise rates before the end of the year, even though the bank’s governor has said a “near-term” move is likely.

And many of those who said it would raise rates stressed this was unlikely to be the start of a major tightening cycle, but rather a reversal of the rate cut after the Brexit vote.

“Very modest action in 2018 and 2019 remains the order of the day, as the Bank balances a sluggish economy, some inflation pressures, the vagaries of sterling, political developmen­ts from the Brexit negotiatio­ns, and actions by other central banks,” said Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

There was more consensus on whether bitcoin or other cryptocurr­encies fitted into a modern investment portfolio, with an overwhelmi­ng 75 percent saying they did not.

Virtual currencies have undergone a volatile period, with China cracking down on exchanges and digital coin-based fundraisin­g while the chief executive of JPMorgan, Jamie Dimon, called the cryptocurr­ency a “fraud”.

Bitcoin prices tumbled 12 percent in September, though they are up more than 300 percent this year.

Raphael Gallardo, a strategist at Natixis Asset Management, called bitcoin “a highly speculativ­e asset with an unreliable market infrastruc­ture”.

“In an unstable world, government­s will not tolerate the further developmen­t of bitcoin as it is an unbreakabl­e way of laundering money and financing illegal activities,” he said.

Instead, government­s and central banks would develop cryptocurr­encies under their own control and oversight, he predicted.

“While cryptocurr­encies are probably here to stay, they are difficult to analyse, wildly volatile and some may be prone to fraud,” added Trevor Greetham, head of multi-asset at Royal London Asset Management.

“The speculativ­e surge in bitcoin looks like a side effect of excessive liquidity in markets, like dotcoms in the 1990s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait