Global Investors Hit 'Hyper-Bull' As Hedging Collapses, Says BofA Survey

(Reuters) - Global fund managers are the most bullish since July 2021, ​January's Bank of America survey showed ‌on Tuesday, with growth optimism jumping and cash levels sinking ‌to a record low 3.2%.

BofA's Bull & Bear Indicator surged to a "hyper‑bull" 9.4, as investors held the least equity-correction protection since January 2018, according to ⁠the survey of ‌96 participants with $575 billion in assets under management.

A net 38% expect a ‍stronger economy, while recession fears fell to a two-year low and an economic "no-landing" became the base case ​for investors, the BoFA report said.

Liquidity was ‌seen as the best since 2021, and nearly half of respondents reported having no hedges against a sharp fall in equity prices.

Geopolitics overtook an AI bubble as the top tail risk, ⁠and long gold was the ​most crowded trade. A long ​position is essentially a bet that an asset will rise in value.

The survey ‍was carried ⁠out between Jan 8 and Jan 15, before U.S. President Donald Trump threatened increasing ⁠tariffs on European allies until the United States is ‌allowed to buy Greenland.

By Danilo Masoni
Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe

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