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Going long on gold second most crowded trade globally, says BofA Securities

Among those surveyed, 46 per cent believed equity markets are in a bull phase, while a net 79 per cent expect a stronger global economy over the next year

The data suggests that the 10-year rolling return has been on a downward course for nearly seven years after touching a record high of 20.3 per cent in July 2013
Surprisingly, 31 per cent of fund managers surveyed by BofA Securities believe gold is overvalued
Puneet Wadhwa New Delhi
2 min read Last Updated : Aug 19 2020 | 12:47 AM IST
Going long on gold is the second most crowded trade among global fund managers with 23 per cent of those surveyed bullish on the yellow metal, suggest the findings of BofA Securities August Fund Manager Survey (FMS) released on August 18. Thus far in calendar year 2020 (CY20), gold prices have moved up nearly 30 per cent (YTD) and 38 per cent in the past one year, data from World Gold Council show.

 
Going long on US technology stocks topped was the most crowded trade among global fund managers in August with 59 per cent of those surveyed globally bullish on this asset class. Surprisingly, 31 per cent of fund managers surveyed by BofA Securities believe gold is overvalued. Among those surveyed, 46 per cent believed equity markets are in a bull phase, while a net 79 per cent expect a stronger global economy over the next year.


The survey was conducted from August 7 to 13, 2020. An overall total of 203 panelists with $518 billion worth of assets under management (AUM) participated in the survey. 181 participants with $489 billion AUM responded to the Global FMS questions and 84 participants with $144 billion AUM responded to the Regional FMS questions.


“Asset allocation is stubbornly skewed toward US growth stocks; but August FMS shows 'green shoots' for 'inflation assets'…rotation to Europe and emerging market stocks, banks, small-cap and value stocks. August FMS shows investors V-shape recovery expectations are low at 17 per cent compared to 37 per cent that expect global economic recovery to be W-shape or U-shape (31 per cent),” BofA Securities said.

Net 57 per cent of FMS investors, according to BofA Securities, still want companies to improve balance sheets not expand capex. “Inflation expectations have increased 15 percentage points (ppt) in August over July, with net 52 per cent of FMS investors expecting higher global CPI in the next 12 months,” BofA Securities said.

The dominant concerns of investors since 2011, according to BofA Securities, have been Eurozone debt & potential breakdown; Chinese growth; populism, quantitative tightening & trade wars; now global coronavirus.

A second wave of Covid-19 dominates the fear quotient with 35 per cent of FMS investors saying it is the top tail risk, followed by US-China trade war, US election and a credit event that can spook global financial markets.

Topics :Gold BofAInvestors

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