Traders With $515 Billion Boycott Stocks for Cash Despite Rally
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.© Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Global equity allocations in February fell to the lowest level since September 2016, according to BofA, even as the MSCI All Country World Index is up almost 8 percent in 2019. That indicates a deep lack of conviction in the sustainability of the rebound among traders. The share of investors who believe the S&P 500 Index has peaked at 2,931 jumped to 34 percent this month from just 11 percent in September.
Quotes in the article
Money managers moved into cash instead, taking the net allocation to 44 percent, the highest overweight since the 2009 financial crisis, according to BofA. Still, the strategists believe that investor hesitancy is going to be favorable for markets this quarter and BofA’s cash balance indicator is currently flashing a contrarian buy signal, the note said.
The “February fund manager survey shows a big rotation from equities into cash,” BofA strategists led by Michael Hartnett said in a note. It “does not show an improvement in investor sentiment; we say bearish investor positioning remains first-quarter positive for asset prices."
Allocation to U.S. stocks fell to the lowest in 9 months to a 3 percent underweight, with the region being the second-least favored among the money managers, the note says. In contrast, euro-zone equities saw a jump in allocation to a 5 percent overweight, ending an 18-month streak of investment cuts. Exposure to emerging-market stocks kept rising to a 37 percent overweight.
The survey period spanned the week through Feb. 7 and included 173 participants with $515 billion of assets under management.
Other things mentioned in the survey include:
Global economy expectations rose in February, but modestly, from extremely low levels, with two-thirds of investors still expecting slower growth in the next 12 monthsPoll shows a new high in the number of investors demanding companies reduce leverage, while investors favoring dividends and buybacks is at an all-time low The most crowded trades are being long emerging markets, long U.S. dollar and long FAANG + BAT stocks.
Related video: Cash is not a bad thing for many investors

- How this woman traveled the world – and started a $220M companyKoel Thomae says she never would have founded yoghurt company, Noosa, if she had followed a traditional career path.
Inc.
- Oregon on track to impose statewide rent control lawThe state is on course to become the first to impose mandatory rent controls.
Newsy
- Why TVs are now so cheapWhy TVs are now so cheap
USA TODAY
How this woman traveled the world – and started a $220M company
Inc.1:37Oregon on track to impose statewide rent control law
Newsy0:46Why TVs are now so cheap
USA TODAY2:11Company helps small businesses compete with Amazon Prime on shipping
Fox Business3:21Streaming vs. cable: The confusing costs of cord cutting
Money Talks News3:33How an Oakland man went from drug dealer to owning a dispensary
USA TODAY1:51Remain or leave? Carmakers confront hard Brexit choices
Reuters2:15Uber vs. Lyft IPO: The race to go public
The Wall Street Journal.4:26
How one businesswoman turned her passion into big money
TODAY5:06Swiss bank gets hit with $5B penalty for tax evasion scheme
Newsy0:45Nike debuts Colin Kaepernick 'Icon' jersey, sells out within hours
Veuer0:52Former FDA commissioner says agency erred in allowing companies to promote opioids
CBS News1:28Michael Jackson's Neverland Ranch up for sale again
USA TODAY0:55Uber Eats partnership puts a strain on McDonald’s franchise owners
Fox Business4:39Petition calls for sale of Montana to Canada to pay $1 trillion US debt
USA TODAY0:374-day work week trial found to decrease stress but not work output
Veuer0:46
--With assistance from Michael Msika.