Analysis-Global investors, blindsided by stunning US comeback, jump back in
By Naomi Rovnick
LONDON (Reuters) -An investor out of the United States and into Europe and Asia has reversed course as big money managers ride a wave of AI and interest rate-cut euphoria into the year-end, ditching the “rest-of-the world” trade for now.
Global fund managers had offloaded U.S. stocks at a record pace after President Donald Trump unveiled steep reciprocal tariffs on April 2. The market has recovered since then, however, and U.S. stocks have surged 7% in the last quarter.
Wall Street’s market supremacy is back and investors are likely to favor U.S. assets in the coming quarter as traders price in 110 basis points of Federal Reserve rate cuts by end-2026 and AI juggernauts boost analysts’ stock market targets and U.S. economic growth.
“There’s no need for pessimism right now about the U.S.,” said Salman Ahmed, Fidelity International’s global head of macroeconomics and strategic asset allocation. He was positive on U.S. small-cap stocks that typically benefit from rate cuts and had turned neutral on Europe and Japan.
The Fed last week cut rates for the first time since December.
BIG INVESTORS, IN U-TURN, BET ON US EQUITIES -BofA
In June, global fund managers surveyed by Bank of America were the most negative on U.S. stocks and the dollar out of all major asset classes. But by early September, these big investors were betting again on U.S. equities, buying back into the dollar and reducing exposure to euro zone, emerging market and UK stocks, BofA’s survey showed.
Francesco Sandrini, Italy CIO at Europe’s biggest investor Amundi, said he was currently tilting his portfolios towards the U.S. and expected smaller domestically focused companies to benefit in particular from rate cuts. He had turned less positive on European banks and Chinese stocks.
Data from fund tracking service Lipper, whose figures provide a snapshot of the global mood, showed investors resumed buying U.S. stocks in August after pulling almost $78 billion from the asset class in the three months prior.
Flows into euro zone funds that report to Lipper, which hit a 12-month high of almost $3 billion in April, dwindled to $563 million by August.
Investors said these moves showed how diversifying away from the U.S. was a better idea in theory than in practice.
“You cannot get away from the U.S.,” Russell Investments global head of fixed income and foreign exchange solutions strategy Van Luu said. “Especially with equities.”
Measured in dollars, the de facto reporting currency for many global investors, the benchmark S&P 500 index has outpaced its European equivalent since June. U.S. small caps have edged ahead of Europe’s since late August.
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