Home > World > World stocks seen as most overvalued in 17 years

World stocks seen as most overvalued in 17 years

Written by Business World, on 22nd Mar 2017. Edited on 23rd Mar 2017 Posted in World

article headline

World stocks are their most expensive in 17 years, but bond yields will need to be much higher than they are currently to trigger an equity bear market, a monthly fund manager survey showed on Tuesday.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch's (BAML) poll of investors managing $592 billion worldwide was conducted from March 10-16, a period that saw Wall Street's recent string of record highs fizzle out and the Federal Reserve raise U.S. interest rates.

Global investors' allocation to stocks hit a two-year high, according to the poll, with a net 48% now overweight the market.

A net 34% of fund managers now thing equities are overvalued, the highest proportion since 2000, BAML said.

Regionally, the U.S. stock market is the most overvalued, according to 81% of respondents. A net 44% think emerging market stocks are undervalued, while a net 23% say the same about euro zone equities.

The biggest risk to the equity bull market will come from higher interest rates, reckon 35% of respondents, rather than weak company earnings (21$).

A net 36% said the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield will have to rise above 3.5% before a bear market in stocks ensues. The yield has risen sharply since mid-2016 but has struggled to rise above 2.5%. The last time it was higher than 3.5% was six years ago.

The Fed raised rates last week and is on course to tighten further this year. But investors are skeptical growth and inflation will be strong enough to warrant a sustained series of hikes, and longer-fated yields have slipped as a result.

The drift lower in yields has pulled the dollar down with it. A key measure of the dollar's trade-weighted value hit a six-week low on Tuesday.

According to BAML's survey, the dollar is its most overvalued since June 2006 and long dollar positions were once again far and away the most 'crowded trade' in world markets.

Despite the extreme pricing in stocks and the dollar, investors are confident neither is in bubble territory, and that economic growth and profits will continue to rise.

A net 57% of those polled said global profits will improve over the coming year, up from 55% in the last month's poll and close to a seven-year high, BAML said.

European elections leading to euro zone disintegration remained the biggest 'tail' risk to world markets followed by a global trade war, although both risks diminished from February. The proportion of those polled who think a global bond market crash is the biggest risk rose to 18% from 13%. (Reuters)

Source: www.businessworld.ie

About us

More articles from World

image Description

US Multinationals Spend Over €31bn In The Irish Economy Every Year

Read more
image Description

Enterprise Ireland Trade Mission to Gulf Region

Read more
image Description

Asia Matters Business Awards celebrate record €120bn Ireland-Asia trade

Read more
image Description

Aer Lingus launches largest ever Transatlantic schedule

Read more
image Description

American Chamber celebrates 950 US Companies In Ireland

Read more