More money managers say U.S. stocks overvalued, cut holdings but add Europe, Japan

More money managers say U.S. stocks overvalued, cut holdings but add Europe, Japan
Survey finds expectations of interest rate hike hits sentiment but strong dollar considered positive for the global economy and markets.
MAR 19, 2015
Money managers are reducing U.S. equity holdings amid expectations of a U.S. rate hike, said Bank of America Merrill Lynch's monthly fund manager survey. Accordingly, a net 19% of respondents reported being underweight U.S. equities, the highest reading since January 2008 and down from a net 6% overweight in February. A net 23% of respondents now consider the asset class overvalued, the highest reading since May 2000, and a net 35% want to underweight the asset class, the highest reading in nearly 10 years. (More: Investors shun stock pickers, favor Vanguard, BlackRock, State Street) Managers' allocations to emerging markets equities also decreased in March. A net 11% of respondents reported being underweight the asset class compared to a net 1% underweight last month. A net 57% of respondents also said global emerging markets equities is the asset class they would most like to underweight in the next 12 months. OUTLOOKS IMPROVING On the other hand, managers' outlooks on Europe and Japan are improving. A net 60% and 40% of managers reported being overweight eurozone and Japanese equities, respectively, up from a net 55% and 35%, last month. Also, a net 38% expect double-digit earnings growth in Europe in the next year, up from a net 3% in February and a net -43% in January and a net 63% of managers want to overweight the region in the next 12 months. (More: Pimco Total Return managers reverse course set by Bill Gross) “Investor consensus suggests that the strong dollar will act as a positive rather than a negative for the global economy and markets,” said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, in a news release on the survey results. “Bullishness toward European stocks has reached uncharted territory. Demand for financials highlights confidence in domestic growth, while belief in European exporters is building on gains seen last month,” added Manish Kabra, European equity and quantitative strategist, in the news release. The survey of 207 managers with a total of $565 billion in assets under management was conducted March 6-12. Meaghan Kilroy is an online reporter at sister publication Pensions & Investments.

Latest News

 Zocks, Jump expand advisor reach with new enterprise integrations
Zocks, Jump expand advisor reach with new enterprise integrations

Zocks has inked an exclusive partnership with mega-RIA Hightower, while Jump becomes the choice AI operating system for Equitable Advisors' field force.

SEC moves to scrap climate disclosure rules for public companies
SEC moves to scrap climate disclosure rules for public companies

The agency's proposal to rescind the contentious 2024 Biden-era mandate opens up a 60-day public comment period.

EverNest joins Focus after bitter split with Sanctuary Wealth
EverNest joins Focus after bitter split with Sanctuary Wealth

The Carmel, Indiana RIA grew nearly 150% in assets since severing ties with its first backer following a FINRA dispute.

Advisor moves: Wells Fargo welcomes back $550M advisor duo from Ameriprise
Advisor moves: Wells Fargo welcomes back $550M advisor duo from Ameriprise

Meanwhile, Raymond James' employee arm adds a defector from D.A. Davidson, and South Carolina-based RIA Ballast Rock Private Wealth recruits a new advisor.

JPMorgan contests $4.25M order over LA advisor's Super Bowl spending
JPMorgan contests $4.25M order over LA advisor's Super Bowl spending

A FINRA arbitration panel sided with a former wealth manager fired over a $642 deli platter and a disputed client event.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.