BofA Poll Projects 4% Gain in S&P 500 as Bull Market’s Peak

  • Profit and economic growth expectations surge in December
  • Allocation to euro-area stocks jumped, U.K. underweight shrank
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Investors are embracing risk assets, cutting cash levels to a six-year low, but according to the latest Bank of America Corp. survey, there isn’t much steam left in the stock market rally.

Profit growth expectations have turned positive for the first time since August 2018 and most fund managers don’t anticipate a recession in 2020, according to the December poll. However, investors see the S&P 500 Index’s bull run peaking at 3,322 -- an upside of just 4.1% compared with Monday’s close.

The monthly survey is in line with a growing number of strategists and investors, who recommend sticking with risk assets into 2020 but warn that returns will be far more limited compared to 2019. Both U.S. and European stock markets reached record highs this week, supported by progress on a U.S.-China trade deal and diminishing political risks following Boris Johnson’s U.K. election victory.

The allocation to euro-area equities jumped, with 24% of investors saying they’re overweight in the region’s stocks, which is the highest proportion since May 2018. Fund managers have also been reducing their underweight position in U.K. equities.

In another sign of optimism, about two-thirds of surveyed investors said companies are under-investing in their businesses, with about half of fund managers wanting them to boost capital expenditure.