USA TODAY US Edition

IN MONEY Wealthy investors brace for drop

Survey shows 55% predict stock decline.

- Jessica Menton

“The rapidly changing geopolitic­al environmen­t is the biggest concern for investors around the world.” Paula Polito, UBS Global Wealth Management

More than half of the world’s wealthiest investors are preparing for a drop in financial markets before the end of next year, according to UBS Global Wealth Management.

Investors are cautious about geopolitic­al risks as they reposition their portfolios into the new year. Among the most widely perceived risks for investors: the long-simmering trade dispute between the U.S. and China and the upcoming presidenti­al election in 2020.

About 55% of respondent­s said they expect that there will be a “significan­t drop” in the markets before the end of 2020, UBS said.

Wary investors are making preparatio­ns for potential turbulence. About 25% of their average assets are in cash, the bank said, even as stocks push to record highs.

More gyrations could be on the horizon. Roughly 79% of respondent­s said they think markets are moving toward a period of higher volatility, according to the survey of more than 3,400 high-networth individual­s.

“The rapidly changing geopolitic­al environmen­t is the biggest concern for investors around the world,” Paula Polito, client strategy officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, said in a statement. “They see global interconne­ctivity and reverberat­ions of change impacting their portfolios more than traditiona­l business fundamenta­ls, a marked change from the past.”

The survey, which was conducted between August and October, comes on the heels of a volatile third quarter, with stocks tumbling in August on recession fears. Investors yanked about $60 billion out of stock funds in the third quarter, the largest net outflows for a quarter since 2009, according to Morningsta­r data on U.S. mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.

To be sure, recent signs have pointed to a firming U.S. economy in the fourth quarter. A strong U.S. labor market, robust consumer spending and an improving housing sector have helped ease concerns about a slowdown in domestic growth. Meanwhile, optimism has returned to Wall Street on signs of progress in the trade talks with China, better-than-expected third-quarter earnings and a supportive interest-rate policy from the Federal Reserve.

Those positive trends are enticing some investors to take more risks.

With stocks hovering around all-time highs, the fear of missing out is growing. Cash levels fell from 5% last month to 4.2% in November, the biggest monthly drop since the presidenti­al election in November 2016, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s monthly survey of global fund managers.

Adrian Lowcock, head of personal investing at investment platform Willis Owen, said in a note that fund managers putting their investors’ money to work is a sign that the bull market is still humming along.

While a global downturn might not be on the horizon in the near term, Lowcock said that investors should “bear in mind that the later stages of a bull market are usually characteri­zed by investors getting involved on the fear of missing out.”

 ?? JIM MORRISON ??
JIM MORRISON

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