Funds to cut equity allocations in 2019: Blackrock
survey
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[January 07, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - Global investors are
shoring up portfolios against economic downturn, with plans to cut
allocation to publicly listed equities in 2019 in favor of assets such
as private equity and real estate, according to the results of a
BlackRock survey.
Over half the 230 institutions managing $7 trillion of inevitable assets
surveyed by BlackRock plan to decrease allocation to public equities
this year, up from 35 percent in 2018, the survey, released on Monday,
showed.
Global stocks suffered their worst year in over a decade in 2018, with
trepidation surrounding economic slowdown, trade tension and rising
interest rates infecting the market in the second half of the year.
Markets have been similarly volatile at the start of 2019.
Equities appear to be especially in disfavor in the United States and
Canada, with 68 percent of investors there planning to reduce
allocations, versus 27 percent in continental Europe, the survey showed.
Underpinning this rebalancing is concern that the economic cycle is
turning, as cited by 56 percent of clients.
While strong economic data in the United States and a dovish message
from U.S. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell on Friday have helped to
alleviate some worries, the U.S. and Canada-based investors were most
concerned about rising U.S. interest rates, BlackRock said.
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A trader looks at price monitors as he works on the floor at the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., January
3, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
This represented just over half of those surveyed (52 percent), while
geopolitical instability and trade tensions were citied as bigger concerns by
European and Asian accounts.
BlackRock said private assets and fixed income are likely to be the main
beneficiaries of the shift in sentiment in 2019, as investors search for
uncorrelated sources of returns.
As such, 54 percent of those surveyed intend to increase exposure to real
assets, 47 percent planned to boost private equity allocations and 40 percent
chose real estate.
Flows to fixed income are expected to increase to 38 percent, from 29 percent a
year earlier. Within this asset class, private credit is set to benefit -- 56
percent of those surveyed globally planned to increase allocations to the
sector.
Cash too will be a key part of portfolios though BlackRock highlighted regional
differences. Of Asia-Pacific accounts, 33 percent planned to increase cash
holdings while 27 percent of continental European accounts aimed to decrease
cash.
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