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Bank of America: Investors ‘nervous bulls’ as four in five anticipate soft landing

BoA marks commodities as top contrarian move.
Despite having prominent fund managers at the helm, both funds are managed in a collegial style, Dobrescu noted. Marion Le Morhedec, who managed the Axa fund since inception, moved to a different role in the firm in the late 2016, leaving the fund in the hands of her long-term deputy manager Jonathan Baltora, who joined the team in 2010. While the change is significant, Dobrescu said she maintained her confidence in the continuity of the management. “[Baltora] has a very good handle on the portfolio, knows all the positions and is really able to articulate the strategy very well,” she said. Baltora is supported in his role by the rest of the eight-person global rates and inflation team. The lead manager of the Pimco fund is Mihir Worah, a “Pimco veteran” who was one of the key people promoted in the wake of the departure of the superstar fund manager Bill Gross in 2014. Worah was named one of the six deputy CIOs in the flat structure the firm adopted after Gross’s departure. “We are very happy with the quality of this duo [of Worah and co-manager Jeremie Banet],” Dobrescu said, and its third member Michael Althof. They also rely on Pimco’s large resources for quantitative work and derivatives management, used in the fund’s bond-plus tactics.

Expectations of a soft landing rose among among investors from 76% in August to 79% in September, according the Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey.

The September expectations of a soft landing include the largest proportion of investors so far this year. Those predicting a hard landing have also slightly dropped off from August, now including 11% of those surveyed, down from 13%. This has fallen significantly from the same time last year, when 21% of investors anticipated a hard landing.

In addition, over half of investors believe there will not be a recession in the US within the next 18 months.

Michael Hartnett, investment strategist for Bank of America, said: “Macro pessimism was centred on China in the September Fund Manager Survey… China growth expectations fell to a record low with net 18% expecting a weaker Chinese economy (most in 3-year history).

“In contrast, US growth outlook improved slightly in September with net 51% expecting a weaker US economy next 12 months, down from net 56% in August.”

As market sentiment looks slightly more sunny, surveyed investors took a small chunk from cash investments, from an averaged 4.3% of assets under management to 4.2%. Yet, a net 11% of those surveyed say they remain overweight in cash. Investors also remain overweight in bonds, with September marking the largest overweight since December 2023, at net 11%.

The sentiment movements have swayed Bank of America to mark commodities as a contrarian market play. Currently, allocation to commodities sits at a seven-year low among those surveyed. In the last four months, allocation to commodities has dropped 24 percentage points.

September’s global survey included 206 respondents, with 36 CIOs, 93 portfolio managers, 64 asset allocators, strategists, and economists, and 13 uncategorised. Of the group, 91 ran mutual funds and 58 ran institutional funds, with the rest in hedge funds, proprietary trading desks, or others. The average investment time horizon sat at 7.3 months.

Part of the Mark Allen Group.