Investors' cash levels at their lowest since pre-taper tantrum of 2013: Bank of America
London
CASH levels in investment portfolios have hit the lowest since just before the so-called taper tantrum of 2013, according to Bank of America (BofA)'s February fund manager survey, which also showed investors to be overwhelmingly bullish on the economic outlook.
World stocks have been notching successive record highs in 2021, with central banks remaining supportive and governments injecting money into the system to get economies up to speed after the damage caused by Covid-19.
"The only reason to be bearish is ... there is no reason to be bearish," Michael Hartnett, BofA's chief investment strategist, told clients, who have the highest equity and commodity allocations in a decade.
A net 91 per cent of them expect a stronger economy - the best ever reading in BofA's survey published on Tuesday, which covered 225 fund managers with US$645 billion in assets under management.
Investors showed they had the capacity to increase risk, taking their cash levels down to 3.8 per cent - the lowest since March 2013, just before the United States Federal Reserve sparked a market tantrum by signalling its intent to wind down, or taper, the bond-buying programme it launched during the 2008 crisis.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
But investors hear echoes of the 2013 situation, and see another taper tantrum as the second biggest "tail risk" after delays in the roll-out of coronavirus vaccines.
Despite these issues simmering in the background, and the huge gains across markets, BofA's survey, conducted between Feb 5 and 11, found only 13 per cent of its participants concerned about a US equity market bubble. About 53 per cent said US equity markets were in a late-stage bull market, while 27 per cent saw it in the early stages.
Notably, a net 25 per cent of the investors surveyed said they were taking "higher-than-normal" risks - the highest percentage ever. "Long tech" was the "most crowded trade", followed by "long bitcoin" and "short US dollar".
Wall Street's "fear gauge", the CBOE Volatility Index , dipped below 20 on Friday for the first time in almost a year.
"As volatility breaks down, this provides just one more of the many reasons for stocks to rally," said Saxo Bank market strategist Eleanor Creagh. "With the USD and volatility on the decline, asset managers will gross up positioning."
The buying spree prompted the MSCI all-country world stocks index to register its 12th consecutive day of gains, its longest rising streak in 17 years.
In contrast a survey by Deutsche Bank showed investors agreeing that there were many bubbles in financial markets, with bitcoin and US tech stocks topping the bubble talk.
The survey did, however, suggest "taper tantrum" fears were receding. Some 26 per cent foresaw such an event this year, down from a third in January. REUTERS
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services