A mountain of cash sits on the edge of financial markets, waiting to tip in when confidence is restored in riskier assets. For investors, this is both an opportunity and a problem.
While it brings hope to those banking on a sharp reversal in investments later this year — those looking for a V-shaped economic and market recovery — it is also causing difficulties because money is not being put to work.
“Basically, what we are seeing is hoarding of liquidity,” said John Stopford, head of fixed income at Investec Asset Management. “It’s distorting pricing. It’s a problem.”
Plenty of evidence exists to show investors stocking up on huge levels of safe-haven cash in the face of credit market gyrations, a worsening global economic outlook and volatile financial markets.
The latest Reuters asset allocation polls, for example, show leading international investment firms holding some 5.9 percent of their mixed-asset portfolios in cash no checking account payday advance. It compares with a long-term average of 4.5 percent.
A steady move into cash is also seen in Merrill Lynch’s monthly poll of fund managers. Some 51 percent were overweight in cash in March, compared with 48 percent in February and 43 percent in January.
Flow data from fund researcher EPFR Global quantifies the trend. It shows a net $140.9 billion flowing into money market funds in the first quarter. To put this in context, developed market equities saw outflows of $69 billion.
Speakers at this week’s Reuters Hedge Funds and Private Equity Summit went further, indicating that the cash hoarding may be far more widespread than just in traditional fund management firms.
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