Bank of America’s December Global Fund Manager Survey (FMS) is signaling a potential “sell” moment for global equities, as cash allocations among fund managers have dropped to their lowest level in three years—3.9% of assets under management (AUM). This marks the second instance in three months of hitting this contrarian “sell signal” level.
Key Insights:
Low Cash Levels: The drop in cash allocations below 4% triggers Bank of America’s FMS Cash Rule, historically associated with market tops.
Previous Sell Signals: Past instances of cash levels this low have often preceded major market corrections, including those in early 2002 and February 2011.
Recent Performance: Historically, following these “sell” signals, global equity returns have seen declines of -2.4% in the month following and -0.7% in the following three months.
Investor Sentiment: The survey highlights super-bullish sentiment, with fund managers optimistic about U.S. growth prospects driven by expectations surrounding “Trump 2.0” policies and potential rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
Sector Preferences: While equities are heavily favored, fund managers are hedging against risks by increasing their allocations to cash, bonds, and consumer staples, while shorting U.S. stocks, technology, and banking sectors.
To analyze financial fundamentals and valuation metrics, the Ratios (TTM) API provides key insights into profitability, liquidity, and efficiency ratios.