Investors called bearish positions on Europe a crowded trade
once again, although the market became slightly less pessimistic
on the region, according to the survey, released on Tuesday.
Allocations to euro zone equities jumped 8 percentage points
month-on-month to a net neutral as some Europe bears unwound
their positions, betting the trade had become overcrowded.
Trade war and a China slowdown were joint biggest tail risks,
according to the survey of 187 investors with $547 billion
assets under management, while growth worries dominated.
Some 66 percent of investors see a "low growth, low inflation"
backdrop - the highest level since October 2016.
While an inversion of the U.S. yield curve led many to predict
an imminent recession, the survey found 70 percent of investors
expect a global recession to start only in the second half of
2020.
A volte-face by the U.S. Federal Reserve on rate hikes helped
drive stocks up this year. In the latest survey, a slim majority
of investors said the U.S. Federal Reserve will not raise
interest rates again during this cycle.
Allocation to global bank stocks fell to the lowest level since
September 2016 - a reflection of investor wariness of the
sector, which suffers when interest rates stay lower for longer.
"Investors are positioned for 'secular stagnation', long assets
that outperform when growth and rates fall (cash, EM,
utilities), short those that require higher growth and rates
(equities, eurozone, banks)," wrote BAML strategists.
Hedge funds, meanwhile, were chasing the equity rally. Their
gross leverage - at 43 percent - and net equity exposure were
both at the highest since September 2018.
UK stocks remained the surveyed investors' least favored region.
Allocations held flat from last month, at 28 percent underweight
as another delay to the date of Britain's exit from the European
Union was announced.
"Sentiment has modestly improved from the max bearish 41 percent
underweight in March 2018, but few investors own the region,"
the strategists wrote.
(Reporting by Helen Reid; editing by Josephine Mason, Larry
King)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|