BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey Finds Investors Ruling Out U.S. Fed Rate Hike Before Second Half of 2010
November 18 2009 - 8:30AM
PR Newswire (US)
Commodities Most Popular in Four Years as Demand for Inflation
Protection Grows NEW YORK and LONDON, Nov. 18 /PRNewswire/ -- A
majority of investors expects the U.S. Federal Reserve to hold off
from raising interest rates until the second half of 2010,
according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Survey of Fund Managers for
November. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090812/CL60095LOGO ) Asked
when they think the Fed will first increase rates, more than three
quarters of the panel predict the second half of 2010 or beyond.
One in six respondents believes the Fed will not act before 2011.
While inflation has become a nagging worry for investors, they have
expressed no conviction that they expect more than a minor increase
from the current low level. A net 47 percent of respondents expect
global core inflation to be higher in 12 months, up from a net 39
percent in October. At the same time two thirds of the panel
believe that existing monetary policy is "about right." Demand for
assets that protect against inflation, such as gold, oil and
emerging market equities, has increased. Commodities are at their
most popular with the panel since the survey first asked about the
asset class in 2005. A net 25 percent of the panel is overweight
commodities, up from 11 percent in October. A net 53 percent of the
panel is overweight emerging market equities, up from a net 46
percent in October. Assets that protect against deflation, such as
fixed income and utilities, are less popular. "Investors see
inflation as a greater risk than deflation and are hedging that
risk with overweight positions in emerging markets and commodities,
and an underweight position in the U.S. dollar," said Michael
Hartnett, chief global equity strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch
Global Research. Concern over corporate balance sheets eases as
risk appetite ticks up Just two months ago, investors were sending
a clear message that corporates should put debt reduction first and
investment, or capital expenditure, second. Now they're less sure.
Indeed recent trends suggest that next month they could be willing
CFOs to put capex first. The number of respondents suggesting
companies use cash for capital spending has risen to 32 percent
this month from 25 percent in September. The proportion asking
companies to put the balance sheet first has fallen to 36 percent
this month from 50 percent in September. Demands for higher
dividends are muted with 22 percent asking companies to prioritise
returning cash to shareholders. This was down slightly from 23
percent in October. "The last time we saw a shift towards
prioritising capex ahead of balance sheet repair was in 2003, and
it served as a clear buy signal for equities. It could signal the
transfer of risk from equity to credit," said Gary Baker, head of
European equity strategy at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research.
This shift reflects how risk appetite among investors is tip-toeing
upward. The proportion of panelists taking lower than normal risk
has shrunk to a net 1 percent, down from a net 16 percent in
September. Higher risk appetite is also evident in emerging
markets. "We are seeing a vivid and extreme bent towards high-beta
markets, such as Russia, and movement away from lower beta markets,
such as Chile and Malaysia," said Michael Hartnett. Europeans swing
out of cyclicals back to defensive stocks While a net 22 percent of
global asset allocators view Europe as the most undervalued global
market, investors within Europe are wary of their region's
equities. European survey respondents made substantial moves out of
cyclical stocks and into defensive sectors over the past month.
More than a quarter of Europeans surveyed increased their positions
in Healthcare/Pharma. A net 16 percent are overweight the sector in
November, compared to a net 10 percent underweight in October. Over
the same period Europeans swung to a net 5 percent underweight
Technology from a net 23 overweight in October. These changes came
despite more panelists predicting stronger economic growth in
Europe over the coming year. One notable factor weighing against
European equities, however, is currency. A net 49 percent of the
global panel view the euro as overvalued and a net 36 percent view
the dollar as undervalued. Survey of Fund Managers A total of 218
fund managers, managing a total of US$534 billion, participated in
the global survey from 6 November to 12 November. A total of 177
managers, managing US$361 billion, participated in the regional
surveys. The survey was conducted by BofA Merrill Lynch Global
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
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http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090812/CL60095LOGODATASOURCE:
BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research CONTACT: Susan McCabe Walley,
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