BofA Merrill Lynch Hedge Fund Manager Survey Finds Risk Appetite Rising

New York (HedgeCo.net) – Investors are demonstrating growing belief in a robust global recovery and have painted a picture of an ideal investment environment, according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Survey of Fund Managers for April.

A total of 197 fund managers, managing a total of $546 billion, participated in the global survey from 1 April to 8 April. A total of 161 managers, managing $359 billion, participated in the regional surveys.

“April’s survey shows a growing number of investors envisaging a Goldilocks scenario of above trend growth and benign inflation. The findings are consistent with the view that the U.S. consumer, far from remaining in intensive care, is on the path back to good health,” said Michael Hartnett, chief Global Equities strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research.

Belief in macroeconomic growth has intensified, according to the report. The number of hedge fund investors, among others, are taking “above normal” risk in their portfolios is at its highest since January 2006, and investors are more bullish about the ability of companies to increase profitability.

The number of respondents predicting “above-trend growth and below-trend inflation” has risen sharply to 32 percent from 21 percent in March, the highest reading since the question first appeared in February 2008. Fewer respondents are expecting below-trend growth. Inflationary fears remain subdued and 42 percent of respondents expect no interest rate hike from the Fed before 2011, up from 38 percent last month.

Average cash balances have fallen to 3.5 percent of a portfolio from 3.8 percent in March. A net 52 percent of the panel is overweight equities, up from a net 33 percent in February, and back to the level seen in January. Within equities, investors have scaled back their underweight positions on banks and raised exposure to cyclical stocks.

Corporate bullishness reaches new level

Hardened bullishness towards corporate profits is underpinning belief in the recovery. April’s survey shows newfound confidence that companies can generate larger profits and, significantly, can increase margins.

A net 71 percent of the panel now believes that corporate earnings will rise 10 percent or more over the next 12 months, up sharply from a net 53 percent in March. A net 42 percent of respondents believe that corporates can grow their operating margins in the next 12 months, up from a net 27 percent in March.

Investors’ expectations of higher payouts appear to be rising. A net 25 percent of the panel says that payout ratios (including dividends and share buybacks) are too low, up from a net 20 percent in March and the highest reading since August 2007. Respondents’ desire to see corporates increase capital spending is at its highest since June 2006, with 43 percent of the panel identifying it as their priority. At the same time, their sense of urgency towards balance sheet repair is diminishing. Just 23 percent of the panel views debt reduction as a priority, the lowest since January 2008.

While investors have been renewing their belief in the corporate outlook they have also increased portfolio allocations towards cyclical stocks. A net 27 percent of asset allocators are overweight industrials, up from 20 percent the previous month, and the percentage of allocators overweight materials rose to 18 percent from 12 percent.

At the same time, a net 10 percent of respondents remain underweight banks this month, down from a net 24 percent in March. One in six investors is now overweight banks, compared with one in 10 in March.

Japan in favor as eurozone becomes no-go zone

Japan is reaping the benefit of investors’ aversion to the eurozone as questions surrounding Greek government debt intensify. A net 12 percent of global asset allocators are overweight Japanese equities, the highest level since July 2007. In February asset allocators were net underweight Japan. A net 18 percent of the panel is underweight eurozone equities.

Investors are more positive about the outlook for Japanese corporates. A small majority (net 3 percent) of the global panel says Japanese companies have the most favorable outlook of all regions. That was previously a minority view (a net negative 4 percent in March).

“As recently as five months ago, investors regarded Europe as the most attractive play on global economic recovery. But with the Greek debt crisis Europe has become a no-go zone and asset allocators now view Japanese equities as a cleaner cyclical play,” said Patrik Schowitz, European Equity strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research.

Editing byAlex Akesson
For HedgeCo.net
alex@hedgeco.net
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