- Investors are more bullish now than at any time during the pandemic, according to an
Investopedia survey of its readers. - 45% of survey respondents said they are bullish on US
stocks versus just 17% who were bearish. - A BofA survey of fund managers backs up Investopedia's claims about market participant bullishness.
Investors are more bullish now than at any time during the pandemic, according to a survey from Investopedia.
Investopedia has been surveying their daily newsletter readers since the pandemic was officially declared on March 11, 2020. Lately, they've been growing more bullish.
In March, 45% of survey respondents said they were bullish while just 17% said they were bearish. That's a higher percentage of bullish investors than at any time during the pandemic.
Survey respondents aren't planning on playing it safe with their money over the coming year either. Just 22% said they are planning to move to safer assets in their portfolios this year, compared to 41% in April of 2020.
Additionally, investors in the survey said they plan on investing more over the next year. 41% of respondents said they will be investing more this year than last year compared to only 16% in the same period a year ago.
When asked what the greatest risk to the
And when asked what asset classes were in a "bubble" right now, only 9% argued there are currently no market bubbles, while over 60% of respondents said they believe bitcoin is a "bubble" and 38% said they believe SPACs are a "bubble".
Despite the fear of market bubbles, 49% of investors said they expect to see returns of 5% or greater in 2021.
Bank of America's survey of global fund managers published last month backs up most of the bullishness seen in Investopedia's survey.
According to that survey, 53% of fund managers believe US stocks are in a late-stage bull market and 27% think we're an early-stage bull market. Plus, only 13% of fund managers believe US stocks are in a bubble.
Finally, 61% of fund managers reported they're net overweight global equities in Bank of America's survey, that's the second-highest level since February 2011, per Yahoo Finance.