Investors Turn on ‘Core Europe’

Peripherals nations are not the only concerns to investors looking into Europe, they think the powerhouse economy might be on the ropes too.

(July 17, 2012) — Germany and France have become “no-go” areas for an increasing number of investors as fears over the periphery countries, which have been causing most of the economic concern, have fallen.

There was a threefold increase in the number of investors who foresaw the risk of a negative shock around Germany’s economy, a monthly fund manager survey by Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BoA Merrill Lynch) showed today.

In June, just 10% of respondents predicted Germany would be hit; the number rose to 32% this month.

Some 55% of respondents feared France would also feel economic pain before the end of the year in this month’s report, an increase from June’s figure.

On this point a survey published this week by JP Morgan concurred, as market participants predicated France had the highest chance of a ‘negative surprise’ of all the major Eurozone countries – including Spain, Italy, Portugal and Greece.

Fears over these periphery countries have fallen, according to BoA Merrill Lynch’s survey, with Ireland leading the way back to the black. Around a third of investors predicted a ‘positive surprise’ for the Irish economy in 2012, up from 16% last month.

Greece is still under the weather in most investors’ eyes, however. Some 37% of respondents thought Greece would avoid exiting the euro – down from 44% last month.

More broadly, views on the global economy were similar to last month with 13% thinking there would be weakening in the coming year.

Across the board, investors felt that corporations were catching up with the sovereign gloom.

The survey report said: “BoA Merrill Lynch’s Growth Expectations Composite [Index] has fallen to 37 [out of 100] in July from 43 in June and 54 in May. A severely deteriorating outlook for profits is driving the fall in confidence. A net 38% of investors say corporate profits will worsen in the coming 12 months – compared with a net 19% a month ago. It represents a 39% point drop since May. The two-month drop is similar to the fall in confidence in summer 2011 as the sovereign debt crisis took shape.”

Despite these fears, investors’ cash piles were reduced to under 5% on average. Most expected more Quantitative Easing, but few expected it to come in the third quarter of the year.

Click here for the full survey.

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