Big cash holdings in Europe signal unease over stock market outlook

Reuters  |  MILAN 

By Danilo Masoni

Worries that turned a promising 2018 into a brutal year remain high and fund managers are dismissing the early rebound as a false start, anticipating more turbulence ahead.

They prefer keeping large sums of money parked until the protectionist war between and clears up or Britain agrees on a Brexit deal, or data gives them some comfort that the global economy is not so in bad shape.

"There's no reason to be 100 percent invested," said Gilles Guibout, of European equities at AXA Investment Managers, which manages a total of 759 billion euros ($872 billion) in various assets.

"The bounce we've seen has no real foundations. We remain sceptical on any strong market recovery because many uncertainties have still no answer."

Guibout has raised the cash component of his portfolios to levels last seen around 10 years ago, at the start of the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis.

He now holds 4-5 percent in cash, just below the upper limit allowed by the funds' policies and three times more than last summer when stocks were near peak levels.

And he was not alone in doing so.

According to Morningstar data gathered for on more than 2,500 funds with around 680 billion euros worth of large-caps European equity, net cash allocation has reached its highest level since May 2017, climbing above 3 percent in December from a two-year low of 2.4 percent in February 2018.

The data also showed that funds managed by other big global money managers such as JPMorgan, BlackRock, Allianz, and had also significantly increased their cash buffers to above average levels over the last few months.

Guibout expects to keep that buffer intact, by buying on the dips and selling the rallies: "I'm struggling to see how all these problems could disappear from one day to the other. Without being pessimist I don't think we're out of the woods yet".

A string of data out of on Thursday added to the gloom: German fell at the fastest rate in 11 years, British posted their biggest drop in a decade, and fell into an economic recession.

Separate data from Refintiv's Lipper showed that the average cash allocations for equity funds in and Britain, Europe's two biggest economies, had reached in 2018 their highest in at least six years at 7 and 3.7 percent respectively.

Graphic: European equity funds cash allocations https://tmsnrt.rs/2BbqOa4

"CASH IS KING"

Many fund managers plan to use their firepower to snap up bargains during sell-offs, but one problem they face is the lack of companies that fit their criteria.

Once high-flying stocks like big tech or luxury groups or even the appear to be still too exposed to risks of a slowdown, especially in China, while companies in sectors less exposed to the cycle look already over-valued.

"I'm keeping the money until there is enough visibility and to be opportunistic during the earnings season," said Michele Pedroni, fund in

"Now more than before cash is and it will likely remain so for a while," he added.

The difficulty in framing investment decisions is reflected in the wide range of forecasts concerning earnings growth.

In Europe, for example, most strategists expect a 4-percent earnings growth this year, while the consensus still points to around 7 percent and some forecast negative growth. Global earnings growth have also been downsized.

Such uncertainty had led Pedroni to more than double his cash buffer to nearly 7-8 percent over the last few months.

On top of that, if the slowdown is too pronounced, earnings may come under more pressure even though central banks may turn more dovish, while if growth resumes monetary policy tightening of could return to scare investors.

This conundrum is another incentive to keep cash high.

"People are sitting on cash," said Willem Sels, at

"We need to wait a little bit before we get more economic data or more on the political side especially on and U.S. tariffs for people to gather that confidence," he added.

In the fourth quarter of 2018 when global stocks lost 13 percent, investors poured $190 billion in money-market funds, the biggest inflow in a decade, according to Lipper from Another $2.8 billion were added so far this month.

Graphic: Flows into global money-market funds https://tmsnrt.rs/2ScLmbU

($1 = 0.8701 euros)

(Reporting by Danilo Masoni; Additional reporting by Josephine Mason; Graphics by Helen Reid; Editing by and Alison Williams)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 01 2019. 15:32 IST