Big money investors haven't hated US stocks this much since the financial crisis
According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch's latest Global Fund Manager Survey, institutional investors think stocks are getting too expensive and they're starting to back away from the market.
For one thing, the percentage of fund managers that are "underweight" US stocks is a net 20%, which is a massive shift from the 1% net overweight position of investors last month.
Big money investors haven't been this net underweight stocks since January 2008, during the depths of the financial crisis.
As for reasons why investors are moving away from the US stock market, it appears that current valuations and political uncertainty are the largest reasons.
According to Michael Hartnett, the chief investment strategist at BAML, a net 83% of fund managers surveyed said US stocks are overvalued - the highest in the history of the survey. Additionally, a net 32% of respondents think that global equities are overvalued, also near the highest in the 17-year history of the survey.
Bank of America Merrill LynchThe other reason, Hartnett said, is the "jump in risk of delayed US tax reform." President Donald Trump's promise to slash corporate tax rates has been cited as a primary driver of the recent record-high in equities. With the failure of the president's healthcare push and administration officials backing off their original August deadline for taxes, it appears that the enthusiasm among large investors is fading.
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