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BofA: Fund Managers Boost Equity Allocations by Record

LONDON, May 19 (Reuters) - Global fund managers raised their allocation to equities by the most on record in May, driven ​by optimism over earnings growth and by the ‌possibility of the Federal Reserve cutting rates, according to a Bank of America monthly survey published on Tuesday.

Stock markets are trading ​close to record highs, after a robust earnings ​season and ongoing optimism about huge spending by companies ⁠on artificial intelligence.

That's in defiance of oil prices ​above $100 a barrel and peace negotiations between the U.S. and ​Iran at a stalemate, which has knocked global bonds.

  • The Bank of America survey, which polled 200 respondents with a combined $517 billion in ​assets under management, was conducted between May 8 and ​May 14.

  • A net 50% of fund managers surveyed said they were ‌overweight ⁠equities compared to 13% the previous month. Average cash levels are 3.9%, down from 4.3%.

  • Just 4% said they saw a "hard landing", where economic growth and job creation suddenly contract, ​compared with 39%, ​who said ⁠they saw "no landing" at all.

  • 66% of respondents said they expected the Strait of Hormuz ​bottleneck to end in the next few ​months.

  • 40% ⁠of respondents said a second wave of inflation was the biggest tail risk right now.

  • 62% of respondents said they ⁠targeted ​a rate of 6% on 30-year ​Treasury yields , which are currently around 5.14%. 20% said they targeted a ​rate of 4%.

Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Alun John

Source: Reuters


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