Subscribe

Bull run that has taken U.S. equities to record highs may be nearing peak

San Diego, California, USA - January 7, 2015: A miniature replica of the famous Charging Bull, by artist Arturo Dimodica, that stands in Bowling Green Park in New York City's financial district on top of a listing of newspaper stock quotes from the New York Times.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey suggests bull run approaching peak, while survey respondents cite a trade war as biggest risk

The bull run that has taken U.S. equities to record highs this year may be about to reach its peak, according to the latest survey of fund managers by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Allocations to U.S. stocks jumped 10 percentage points this month to a net 19 % overweight, the highest since January 2015, the survey said. That makes America the most popular equity region for the first time in five years, according to the bank’s analysts.

“With investors telling us they are long the U.S., the Fed and cash, our view remains: peak profits, policy and returns,” said Michael Hartnett, BofAML’s chief investment strategist. “Rising corporate leverage concerns say bonds should outperform stocks, while a weaker profit outlook suggests defensives could outperform cyclicals.”

Safe-haven appeal has combined with a strong earnings season to keep the stock market of the world’s biggest economy attractive this year even as President Donald J. Trump’s trade curbs pose a threat to global economic growth. Some 57% of respondents in the BofAML survey cited a trade war as the biggest tail risk.

A net 67% of recipients said the U.S. was the most favorable region for corporate profit expectations, the highest proportion in 17 years. Long FAANG and BAT remained the most-crowded trade identified by investors for the seventh straight month.

The survey was conducted between Aug. 3 and 9 among 243 investors with a total $735 billion under management.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

BlackRock’s Preqin deal prompts lower outlook at Moody’s

The ratings company is voicing concerns over the asset management giant's increased debt and leverage ratios.

JPMorgan’s Kolanovic set to depart after string of bad stock calls

Internal memo reveals planned leadership shakeup at the banking giant as its chief market strategist is "exploring other opportunities."

EM currencies fall amid Treasury yields outlook

Concern outweighed better signals on inflation.

Hedge funds react to geopolitical uncertainty

Goldman Sachs says funds dumped European stocks last month.

AI startups add some spice to US VC dealmaking

Global deals were also higher in the second quarter.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print