Press release from Business Wire
BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey Finds Investors Bullish on Global Growth as They Look Beyond Fiscal Cliff
<p class='bwalignc'> <i>Optimism About Chinese Growth Reaches Survey High</i> </p>
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey Finds Investors Bullish on Global Growth as They Look Beyond Fiscal Cliff12:57 EST Tuesday, December 18, 2012
NEW YORK & LONDON (Business Wire) -- Confidence in a recovering global economy is extending into 2013 as
investor fears surrounding the fiscal cliff eased, according to the BofA
Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey for December.
A net 40 percent of investors believe the global economy will strengthen
in the year ahead, a rise of six percentage points month-on-month and
double the reading two months ago. The number of investors viewing the
U.S. fiscal cliff as the biggest tail risk has fallen to 47 percent,
down from 54 percent in November. Despite this fall, however, the fiscal
cliff remains the number one worry.
Emerging markets are the preferred region for the panel. Optimism about
China's economy has reached the highest level recorded by this survey. A
net 67 percent of the regional survey respondents say China's economy
will strengthen in the coming year, up from a net 51 percent in
November. A net 38 percent of asset allocators are overweight emerging
market equities, double the level of September's survey.
“The bulls are back in China, while policy makers elsewhere put bears
onto the back foot. If the bulls are to claim a decisive victory, we
need hard evidence that the economy is reaccelerating,” Michael
Hartnett, chief investment strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global
Research said. “Growth expectations and positioning are converging to
mid-range levels, but many still think earnings expectations are too
high. When these concerns subside, it's likely that cheap valuations of
European stocks will attract global fund managers,” said John Bilton,
European investment strategist.
The number of asset allocators overweight U.S. equities has fallen since
November. But allocations to the eurozone are outweighing U.S.
allocations for the first time since November 2010. The net percentage
of asset allocators overweight eurozone equities has risen to seven, up
from a net 1 percent in November. In terms of sector, investors have
maintained a broadly “risk on” stance – allocations to cyclical sectors
Consumer Discretionary and Industrials have increased, and the market is
firmly overweight both. But the number one sector remains
Pharmaceuticals.
Third successive month of rising sentiment towards corporate profits
The outlook for corporate performance has improved for the third
successive month and more investors are calling for companies to raise
capital expenditure. A net 11 percent of investors believe profits will
improve in the coming 12 months – a 22-point swing from October when a
net 11 percent were forecasting lower profits.
Pessimism about corporate margins has lessened for the third successive
month. The proportion of investors predicting worsening margins has
fallen to a net 27 percent, down from a net 33 percent a month ago and a
net 44 percent in October. Similarly, December's survey shows reduced
skepticism over corporates' ability to deliver double-digit profit
growth. A net 37 percent believes global corporate earnings growth will
be less than 10 percent, down from a net 52 percent in November.
A net 64 percent of the panel believes that companies around the world
are under-investing, the highest reading in the history of the survey
and an increase from a net 59 percent month-on-month. Investors are less
worried about dividends and buybacks – the proportion saying that
payouts are too low has fallen to net 28 percent from a net 34 percent.
Emerging market corporates have consolidated their position as the
panel's favorite. A net 38 percent of investors say that Global Emerging
Market equities have the best outlook for corporate profits in the
coming year, up from a net 32 percent in November.
Japan sentiment rises at home and globally
Global investors' caution towards Japan has eased, while domestic
optimism has strengthened. The proportion of global asset allocators
underweight Japanese equities has fallen to a net 20 percent, down from
a net 34 percent a month ago.
A net 17 percent of the global panel would like to underweight Japanese
equities in the coming year, but that's less than the net 30 percent
taking that view in November. A net 90 percent of Japanese investors
expect the economy to strengthen in the coming year, compared with a net
18 percent in November, while a net 81 percent is forecasting improved
earnings in the coming 12 months.
Liquidity conditions improve
Investors say that liquidity conditions are at their best since May of
this year. The proportion of respondents rating liquidity conditions as
“positive” rose to a net 23 percent, up from a net 13 percent in
November. This marks the third successive month of improving liquidity
ratings and follows efforts to support market liquidity by central
banks, including recent rounds of quantitative easing by the Fed.
Survey of Fund Managers
An overall total of 255 panelists with US$664 billion of assets under
management participated in the survey from 7 December to 13 December. A
total of 193 managers, managing US$503 billion, participated in the
global survey. A total of 135 managers, managing US$305 billion,
participated in the regional surveys. The survey was conducted by BofA
Merrill Lynch Research with the help of market research company TNS.
Through its international network in more than 50 countries, TNS
provides market information services in over 80 countries to national
and multi-national organizations. It is ranked as the fourth-largest
market information group in the world.
BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research
The BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research franchise covers nearly 3,500
stocks and 1,100 credits globally and ranks in the top tier in many
external surveys. Most recently, the group was named Top Global Research
Firm of 2012 by Institutional Investor magazine; No. 1 in the 2012
Institutional Investor All-Asia survey for the second consecutive year;
No. 2 in the 2012 Institutional Investor All-China, All-Europe,
All-Japan and All-Latin America surveys; and No. 3 in the 2012
Institutional Investor All-America survey. The group was also named No.
2 in the 2012 Institutional Investor All-America Fixed Income survey and
in the 2012 Emerging Markets Equity and Fixed Income survey, covering
Emerging Europe, Middle East and Africa.
Additionally, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research was named the No. 1
Global Broker by Financial Times/StarMine, as well as ranked No. 1 in
the U.S. and Europe and No. 2 in Asia. The group was also named No. 1 in
Asia and No. 2 in the U.S. in the Wall Street Journal Best on the Street
2012 Analysts Surveys. The group was also the winner of the Emerging
Markets magazine's EM Research Global Award for 2010 and 2011.
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