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Advisers: Treasuries out, emerging markets in

The Occidental tourists: Advisers placing bigger bets in markets like Shanghai

Survey reveals globalization of portfolios in the works as clients look to expand investment horizons

Financial advisers plan to dump Treasury bills and fixed-income investments from their clients’ portfolios this year in favor of equities, according to a recent survey.
In a March survey of 805 financial advisers by Aberdeen Asset Management Inc., U.S. and emerging-markets equities were the clear favorites, with 46% of the respondents saying they plan to increase allocations to U.S. equities and 38% saying they plan to bump up exposure to emerging market equities. Only 6% said they would cut exposure to the U.S. and 10% said they planned to cut emerging-markets holdings.
Treasury bills are on the outs, with 58% of respondents saying they will cut those holdings, while only 4% plan to add more. Fixed income also takes a hit, with 42% reducing holdings and 9% increasing their fixed-income allocation.
The only categories of fixed income that were more in favor than disfavor are emerging-markets fixed income, which 28% plan to increase and 14% plan to cut, as well as global-developed fixed income (22% increasing, 17% decreasing) and high-yield bonds.
Global-developed equity and U.S. small-cap investments also will get bigger allocations from just over 30% of advisers, while 8% say they will cut global-developed equity and 13% plan to cut their small-cap exposure. U.S. real estate is also on the buy side for 28%, while 14% plan to cut.
“We believe that the survey reveals two forces at play,” Gary Marshall, chief executive officer at Aberdeen, said in a statement. “One shows investors’ increased risk appetite for equities in general, which is consistent with the findings of other studies. The other is the widening of investor appetite from a previous strong ‘home country’ bias to a more diversified international portfolio.”
Advisers picked mutual funds as their preferred international investment vehicle, with 60% choosing open-end mutual funds, compared to 24% who said they preferred exchange-traded funds.
Forty-four percent of the advisers said they recommend an allocation of between 6% and 10% to emerging-markets equity funds; 25% of advisers polled will recommend that clients allocate between 11% and 20% to emerging-markets equity funds. Emerging-markets fixed income gets a 0% to 5% allocation from 43% of advisers and 35% of advisers go a little higher and will recommend 6% to 10% be allocated to emerging-markets fixed income funds.

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