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Investors have been shifting their long-standing strategies in ways that suggest the current ructions on financial markets will not go away soon. In short order, they have cut back on their exposure to stocks in general, begun to have second thoughts about once super-popular emerging market stocks, embraced the recently unloved yen and cosied up to government bonds.
Add to that various negative sentiment surveys - from Merrill Lynch's fund managers' poll to UBS's risk appetite gauges - and you have a picture of investors entering the final weeks of 2007 in a gloomy mood. The primary reason, of course, is the credit crisis, which hit over summer and still haunts investors because of the fog of unknown consequences that comes with it.
"This credit turmoil is not just a storm in a tea cup," said Giorgio Radaelli, chief global strategist at Italian-owned wealth manager BSI. "It is something more significant."
But there are other factors too. The business and investment cycles are increasingly being viewed as having entered their late stages and the US economy's downturn has many - though by no means all - investors concerned about a recession.
This has moved a number of investors to distance themselves from stocks, or at least to cut back on their exposure. Long-term investors tended not to do this during market declines earlier in the year.
Merrill Lynch's November poll showed an average portfolio now down to 51 percent stocks compared with 54 percent in October and 53 percent in September and August. Reuters' October asset allocation poll showed stocks holdings to be lower than their long-term average.
Most significantly, the Merrill survey showed a sharp decline in the share of fund managers who were overweight stocks, in other words those who thought stocks would bounce back soon. While this kind of thing is not altogether unexpected or unusual given the concerns on markets there are other signs of investor retrenchment that have not been seen for some time.
Consider, for example, the sudden demand for Japanese yen, a currency that until recently has been mostly used to fund investments in other currencies - that is, borrowed and sold as part of the carry trade. Financial services firm State Street found during its latest scan of the $15.1 trillion in assets that it holds as a custodian bank that institutional investors are buying yen and have gone overweight for the first time since June 2006.
They have also sold the high-yielding currencies into which they had been swapping their yen. "If risk aversion is going up the first trades to be closed are the carry trades," BSI's Radaelli said. A similar about-face appears to be taking form over emerging market equities, the darlings of investors for some years and an asset class that has managed until now to ride a certain extent above the credit crisis.
MSCI's main emerging market index is up 35 percent for the year, but it has lost 7 percent this month. Perhaps more significantly, fund tracker EPFR Global said investors pulled $2.1 billion from emerging market equity funds in the latest week, the first net redemptions in 11 weeks.
"You have now essentially got three quarters of the world's economy - the US, Europe and Japan - slowing noticeably," said Richard Batty, investment strategist at Britain's Standard Life Investments. "They are demanders of Asian and emerging market exports," he said, adding that emerging market stocks also looked expensive and subject to price-inflating "hot money" flows.
Another sign of a darker investor mood, meanwhile, is renewed demand for government bonds, which for various reasons failed to benefit much during previous recent corrections despite being a traditional safe haven.
Not this time. Investment bank Citi's world government bond yield - a composite - is down to 3.2528 percent, the lowest level this year. Buying bonds has pushed the yield down nearly 75 basis points from its year high in a little over four months.
None of this, of course, excludes that markets may soon turn around or investors improve their mood. Many firms continue to tell their clients that the overall picture is good. In recent interviews with Reuters, for example, strategists from Barclays Wealth, Credit Suisse's asset arm and J.P. Morgan Asset Management have had more or less the same message - it is wise to be cautious but over the long run all should be well.

Copyright Reuters, 2007

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